Abstract
Recent neuropsychological studies have revealed that the processing of kanji (the Japanese morphograms) and kana (the Japanese syllabograms) involves different intrahemispheric mechanisms. We describe a patient showing left unilateral agraphia without apraxia for kanji, but not for kana, who was diagnosed by magnetic resonance imaging as having a lesion of the posterior body of the corpus callosum. This patient indicates that different neural pathways are used for kanji and kana not only intrahemispherically, but also interhemispherically. © 1989 Oxford University Press.
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CITATION STYLE
Kawamura, M., Hirayama, K., & Yamamoto, H. (1989). Different interhemispheric transfer of kanji and kana writing evidenced by a case with left unilateral agraphia without apraxia. Brain, 112(4), 1011–1018. https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/112.4.1011
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