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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2016 Jun 1.
Published in final edited form as: Stroke. 2015 Apr 23;46(6):1561–1566. doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.115.009211

Table 1.

Anatomical regions associated with AOS and aphasia. The first column lists regions of interest (ROIs; defined by the JHU atlas) in which damage was identified to be associated with the behavioral speech characteristics of each disorder. The second column displays the percent of each behaviorally-related statistical map (i.e. cluster) that was distributed within each identified ROI. The third column displays the proportion of each ROI compromised. For example, the superior temporal gyrus was associated with Aphasia, accounting for 9.658% of the voxels associated with this deficit and a total of 76.046% of the voxels in this region.

ROIs associated with
Aphasia characteristics
Percent of the
Aphasia-related
cluster within
each ROI
Percent
of the ROI
damaged
Superior temporal gyrus 9.66 76.05
Posterior middle temporal gyrus 8.53 67.51
Posterior superior temporal gyrus 5.73 76.13
Insula 4.74 93.46
Superior temporal pole 3.72 46.04
Inferior frontal gyrus pars orbitalis 3.46 49.37
Posterior thalamic radiation 3.42 70.67
Inferior frontal gyrus pars triangularis 3.32 41.13
Middle occipital gyrus 3.22 12.57
Angular gyrus 3.14 18.10
Middle temporal gyrus 3.13 43.43
Inferior temporal gyrus 3.12 35.14
Thalamus 3.11 39.07
ROIs associated with
AOS characteristics
Percent of the
AOS-related
cluster within
each ROI
Percent
of the ROI
damaged
Precentral gyrus 48.65 29.91
Postcentral gyrus 21.05 13.82
Superior corona radiata 10.80 26.95
Superior longitudinal fasciculus 9.78 25.07
Supramarginal gyrus 4.59 4.51