1 / 13

Types of Aphasia

Ling 411 – 05. Types of Aphasia. Simple Functions / Complex Functions: Speaking and Understanding. How is simplicity/complexity determined? What about "understanding speech“? A simple process, localized in Wernicke's area? Actually it is a pretty complex process

penda
Télécharger la présentation

Types of Aphasia

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ling 411 – 05 Types of Aphasia

  2. Simple Functions / Complex Functions: Speaking and Understanding • How is simplicity/complexity determined? • What about "understanding speech“? • A simple process, localized in Wernicke's area? • Actually it is a pretty complex process • Similarly, “speaking” • Pretty complex, not just Broca's area • Uses not just Broca’s area but also Wernicke’s area • Without a properly functioning Wernicke’s area, • speech is erratic

  3. Simple Functions / Complex Functions Complex function Simple function

  4. Simple Functions / Complex Functions • Speaking vs. Phonological Production • Phonological production is one part of speaking – located in Broca’s area • Speaking is a complex process • Phonological production plus planning what is about to be produced – involves Wernicke’s area • Understanding speech vs. phonological recognition • Phonological recognition is one part of speech understanding – located in Wernicke’s area • Speech understanding is a complex process • Includes grammatical and semantic activity • Motor activity (Broca’s area) also contributes

  5. Basic functions and complex functions – speaking • Phonological recognition is a basic function • Located in Wernicke’s area • along with, perhaps, the area intermediate between primary auditory area and W’s area • Speaking is a complex function • It is a cooperative effort of several areas, including Broca’s area and Wernicke’s area • Phonological recognition is a necessary component of speaking

  6. Major Types of Aphasia according to A. Damasio • Wernicke’s aphasia • Broca’s aphasia • Transcortical sensory aphasia • Transcortical motor aphasia • Conduction aphasia • Global aphasia • Anomic aphasia • Alexia with agraphia • Alexia without agraphia • Pure word deafness

  7. Wernicke’s Aphasia • Impaired comprehension • Result of failures in phonological discrimination • Fluent verbal output • Augmented verbal output • Extra syllables at ends of words • Extra words at ends of phrases • Extra phrases at ends of sentences • Augmentations usually nonsensical • Syntax otherwise not too bad • Verbal paraphasia, including neologisms

  8. Areas of damage in Wernicke’s aphasia • Always involved: • Posterior superior temporal gyrus • The classical core of Wernicke’s area • Usually also involved: • More of superior temporal gyrus • Middle temporal gyrus • Temporal plane* • Often also involved: • Angular gyrus • Supramarginal gyrus • Temporal-occipital junction area *can be considered part of superior temporal gyrus

  9. Definitions of Wernicke’s area • Narrow definition • Posterior superior temporal gyrus • Including adjacent temporal plane and superior temporal sulcus • Broad definition (used by some) • Includes also angular gyrus and/or supramarginal gyrus • Better term for this broader area: • ‘Posterior language area’

  10. Review Principal cortical gyri (schematic)

  11. Subtypes of Wernicke aphasia • Not discretely different • Rather, spans along a scale • Type I • Damage is more anterior • Phonological recognition most affected • “Word deafness” • Type II • Damage is more posterior, incl. angular gyrus • More word-blindness than word-deafness • I.e., alexia • Intermediate types also occur • “Obviously, all subtypes of Wernicke aphasia are variations on a continuum…” • (Benson&Ardila:144)

  12. Wernicke’s Aphasia examples http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B-LD5jzXpLE&feature=related http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aVhYN7NTIKU

  13. end

More Related