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səhifə | 8/9 | tarix | 11.08.2023 | ölçüsü | 1,17 Mb. | | #139108 |
| Language Disorders
Signer Aphasia - Young man, both spoken and sign language:
- Deaf-mute person, sign language:
- Stroke and damage to left-side of the brain
- Impairment in sign language
- 3 deaf signers:
Spoken and Sign Languages - Neural mechanisms are similar
- fMRI studies show similar activations for both hearing and deaf
- But in signers, homologous activation on the right hemisphere is unanswered yet
Dyslexia - Problem in learning to read
- Common in boys and left-handed
- High IQ, so related with language only
- Postmortem observation revealed anomalies in the arrangement of cortical cells
- Micropolygyria: excessive cortical folding
- Ectopias: nests of extra cells in unusual location
- Might have occurred in mid-gestation, during cell migration period
Acquired Dyslexia = Alexia - Disorder in adulthood as a result of disease or injury
- Deep dyslexia (pays attn. to wholes):
- “cow” -> “horse”, cannot read abstract words
- Fails to see small differences (do not read each letter)
- Problems with nonsense words
- Surface dyslexia (pays attn. to details):
- Suggests 2 different systems:
- One focused on the meanings of whole words
- The other on the sounds of words
Electrical Stimulation - Penfield and Roberts (1959): During epilepsy surgery under local anesthesia to locate cortical language areas, stimulation of:
- Large anterior zone:
- Both anterior and posterior temporoparietal cortex:
- misnaming, impaired imitation of words
- Broca’s area:
- unable comprehend auditory and visual semantic material,
- inability to follow oral commands, point to objects, and understand written questions
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