John Molitoris
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
6 Papers
2 Citations
John Molitoris is an academic researcher from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Aphasia & Spelling. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 6 publications. Previous affiliations of John Molitoris include Johns Hopkins University.
Chat about Author
Papers
Ischemia in Broca Area Is Associated With Broca Aphasia More Reliably in Acute Than in Chronic Stroke
Elisa Ochfeld,Melissa Newhart,John Molitoris,Richard Leigh,Lauren L. Cloutman,Cameron Davis,Jennifer T. Crinion,Jennifer T. Crinion,Argye E. Hillis +8 more
TL;DR: The results indicate that the acute aphasia syndrome may allow the clinician to predict the compromised vascular territory, even when structural imaging shows only a small (or no) infarct.
66
Areas of Right Hemisphere Ischemia Associated with Impaired Comprehension of Affective Prosody in Acute Stroke
Cameron Davis,John Molitoris,Melissa Newhart,Zainab Bahrainwala,Shaan Khurshid,Jennifer Heidler-Gary,Elliott D. Ross,Argye E. Hillis +7 more
- 01 Jan 2010
TL;DR: Stroke patients were significantly more impaired than controls in identifying sarcasm versus sincerity in sentences and identifying affective prosody in sentences, monosyllables, and asyllabic utterances, and in discriminating differences in affectiveProsodic comprehension in sentences.
1
The Role of Brodmann Area 47 in Acute Stroke Patients with Language Impairment
John Molitoris,Margaret W. Seay,Jennifer T. Crinion,Melissa Newhart,Cameron Davis,Argye E. Hillis +5 more
- 01 Jan 2010
TL;DR: It is speculated that left BA 47 is an area is critical for recovery of lexical production, perhaps because it can assume lexicalProduction when BA 44/45 are damaged when it is spared.
1
Patterns of breakdown in spelling in primary progressive aphasia
Kathryn Sepelyak,Jennifer T. Crinion,Jennifer T. Crinion,John Molitoris,Zachary Epstein-Peterson,Maralyssa Bann,Cameron Davis,Melissa Newhart,Jennifer Heidler-Gary,Kyrana Tsapkini,Kyrana Tsapkini,Argye E. Hillis,Argye E. Hillis +12 more
TL;DR: Any cognitive process underlying spelling can be affected in PPA.
Reperfusion of specific cortical areas is associated with improvement in distinct forms of hemispatial neglect.
Shaan Khurshid,Lydia A. Trupe,Melissa Newhart,Cameron Davis,John Molitoris,Jared Medina,Richard Leigh,Argye E. Hillis +7 more
TL;DR: Results demonstrate that reperfusing specific cortical regions yields improvement in different types of neglect, including viewer-centered versus stimulus-centered neglect.