FINAL (Last Slides) Flashcards

1
Q

Diencephalon

A

Sensorimotor integrator and gateway for information to the forebrain

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2
Q

Parts of the Diencephalon

A

Thalamus, epithalamus, hypothalamus, subthalamus

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3
Q

Thalamus

A
  • Channel projections of sensory (pain, taste, temperature, audition, vision) information
  • Integrate sensorimotor information and project afferents from the basal ganglia, limbic system and cerebellum to the primary and premotor cortices
  • Regulate functions of the associational cortex and cortically mediated cognition
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4
Q

Planum Temporale

A
  • larger in left hemisphere

- one of the most important functional areas for language

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5
Q

Broca’s Aphasia

A
  • Nonfluent, telegraphic, poorly articulated verbal output in which meaning is conveyed by content or information–carrying words
  • Deficient naming
  • Deficits in comprehension, especially of multistep commands or sentences with complex syntax
  • Halting, dysfluent repetition
  • Reading comprehension and writing parallel auditory comprehension and spoken language, respectively
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6
Q

Wernicke’s Aphasia

A
  • Fluent, effortless, but relatively meaningless, spontaneous speech and repetition
  • Paraphasias, neologisms, jargon
  • Overuse of social phrases, fillers
  • Impaired comprehension at the word, sentence, and discourse levels
  • Melodic contour of spoken language is often preserved, initially giving listeners the impression that output is intact
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7
Q

Global Aphasia

A
  • Lesions of left MCA territory
  • Severe impairment of all language modalities
  • Spontaneous verbal output may be restricted to single words, nonwords, or undifferentiated phonation
  • Evolve to Broca’s aphasia
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8
Q

Conduction Aphasia

A
  • Relatively fluent, although paraphasic, spontaneous speech, intact auditory comprehension
  • Disproportionately impaired repetition
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9
Q

Anomic Aphasia

A
  • Impaired word retrieval = primary feature
  • Relatively well-preserved function in other realms
  • Circumlocutions for targets, protracted pauses, use of fillers
  • Empty or low-content verbal output
  • Residual language deficit in recovery
  • Least reliably localized aphasia
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10
Q

Transcortical Motor Aphasia

A

Shares many characteristics of Broca’s aphasia, but has the distinctive feature of fluent, grammatical repetition

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11
Q

Transcortical Sensory Aphasia

A

Similar to Wernicke’s aphasia, except for the presence of accurate repetition

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12
Q

Mixed Transcortical Aphasia

A

Analogous to global aphasia, with reduced or absent spontaneous speech, severely impaired language comprehension, and preserved repetition with consequent echolalia

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13
Q

Subcortical Aphasias

A
  • Preservation of repetition common to all three subtypes; features specific to each
  • Striato-capsular
  • Thalamic aphasia
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14
Q

Striato-capsular aphasia and aphasia with white matter paraventricular lesions

A

Impairment of fluency, semantic paraphasias, generally preserved comprehension

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15
Q

Thalamic aphasia

A

Impaired comprehension and naming with fluent output containing predominantly semantic paraphasias

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16
Q

Dual Stream Model

A

Dorsal stream

Ventral stream

17
Q

Dorsal stream

A

-Superior division of left MCA
-Broca’s aphasia
-Maps motor speech representations onto auditory speech representations
-Auditory-motor integration
Essential for speech development and production

18
Q

Ventral Stream

A
  • Inferior division of the left MCA
  • Wernicke’s aphasia
  • Mediates relationship between sound and meaning for perception and production
  • Sound-meaning interface
  • Responsible for processing speech signals for comprehension
  • Bilaterally organized