Table 1.
Mapping parameters.
Table 2.
Tumor location.
Table 3.
Cortical parcellation system.
Figure 1.
Anatomical areas, as described in Corina et al. 2005.
Figure 2.
Hemispheric dominance ratio for different errors.
The graph shows the hemispheric dominance ratio (HDR; quotient of the error rate for the left and right hemisphere) as a box plot for the different error types. A hemispheric dominance ratio >1 means left-sided dominance, and <1 means right-sided language dominance.
Table 4.
Hemispheric dominance ratio.
Figure 3.
Hemispheric dominance ratio of all naming errors.
The scheme shows the mean hemispheric dominance ratio (HDR) ± standard deviation of all naming errors in healthy volunteers (left) and patients (right) for each CPS region. The hemispheric dominance ratio is the quotient of the error rate (fraction of the absolute number of errors and number of stimulations per region) for the corresponding left and right CPS regions. A hemispheric dominance ratio >1 means left-sided dominance, and <1 means right-sided language dominance.
Figure 4.
Hemispheric dominance ratio of all naming errors without hesitations.
The scheme shows the mean hemispheric dominance ratio (HDR) ± standard deviation of all naming errors without hesitations in healthy volunteers (left) and patients (right) for each CPS region. The hemispheric dominance ratio is the quotient of the error rate (fraction of the absolute number of errors and number of stimulations per region) for the corresponding left and right CPS regions. A hemispheric dominance ratio >1 means left-sided dominance, and <1 means right-sided language dominance.