Language Flashcards
What is language?
• A system for representing, communicating information about the world using symbols and rules
Describe the language groups
On image
What are the 5 functional components of language
- ARTICULATION (phonetics)
a. Movement of the tongue, lips and jaw to modify a sound wave
b. Classified by place of articulation
c. Labial
d. Alveolar
e. Palatal
f. …and by manner of articulation
g. Voiced vs. unvoiced
h. Fricative, plosive etc. - PHONOLOGY (fəʊˈnɒləʤi)
a. The sound combinations from which the syllables and words of a language are built up
b. ‘Legal’ phonological structure varies across languages
c. The International phonetic alphabet (IPA) is used as a common notation - MEANING (semantics)
a. The representation in long term memory of concepts and the relations between them
b. Actions, objects, properties -> verbs, nouns and adjectives
c. Largely independent of grammar
d. Mapping between concepts and symbols generally arbitrary
e. though nb onomatopoeia – e.g. ‘hiss’ - SYNTAX
a. The arrangement of words and phrases to create well-formed sentences in a language
b. Relies on grammatical markers and word order
c. In English, word order (SVO) is paramount in assigning role:
d. Other languages rely on ‘markers’ of word role: - COMPREHENSION
a. The ability to represent the meaning of words or sentences spoken or written by another person
b. Entails knowledge of 1 – 4, but also:
c. Context:
d. ‘I reached the bank’
e. Pitch:
f. shī shì shí shî
g. Stress:
h. ‘Do YOU live here?’ vs. ‘Do you LIVE here?’ vs. ‘Do you live HERE?’
i. Prosody:
j. ‘Woman! Without her, man is helpless’ vs. ‘Woman, without her man, is helpless’
Describe the cerebral organisation of language
- ARTICULATION and PHONOLOGY - brocca area
- MEANING in auditory complex
a. Temporal poles
b. Densely interconnected with widespread regions of association cortex
c. ‘Modality-independent’representations - 3) SYNTAX
a. In left anterior frontal gyrus - Comprehension
a. Temporal poles
b. Left inferior frontal gyrus
c. Arcuate fasciculus
d. Left posterior superior
e. Temporal gyrus
f. Primary auditory cortex
What are the 4 types of strokes?
- Broca’s aphasia
- Wernicke’s aphasia
- Conduction aphasia
- Adynamic aphasia
Describe Broca’s aphasia
- Difficulty with articulation and phonology
- Speech: Halting, fragmented, distorted, agrammatic
- Comprehension: Preserved for words; reduced for sentences
- Follows damage to: Broca’s area
- Typical pathologies: Middle cerebral artery infarction; haemorrhagic stroke
Describe Wernicke’s aphasia
- AKA ‘Receptive aphasia’ or ‘sensory aphasia’
- Speech: Fluent, often with meaningless phonological strings
- Follows damage to: posterior regions of language network
- Typical pathologies: penetrating brain injury; cerebral haemorrhage
Describe Conduction aphasia
• Difficulty with repetition • Speech characteristics o Mild fluency and comprehension difficulties • Test o single word and sentence repetition • Follows damage to o posterior perisylvian regions and underlying white matter • Typical pathologies • lacunar stroke
Describe Dynamic aphasia
• Difficulty planning, initiating or maintaining speech
• Speech characteristics
o Reduced, fragmentary, echoic, perseverative speech
• Test
o High vs. low constraint sentence completion
• Follows damage to
o Anterior left inferior frontal gyrus (BA 45)
• Typical pathologies
• Left anterior cerebral artery infarction
What are the 3 types of neurodegeneration?
- Nonfluent progressive aphasia
- Fluent progressive aphasia
- Logopenic progressive aphasia
Describe Non-fluent progressive aphasia
- Slow, distorted, agrammatic speech production
- Begins with subtle changes – progressive course
- Phonological and grammatical errors in spontaneous speech
- Single word comprehension well preserved
- Difficulty understanding sentences
- Typical pathology
- Primary tauopathy [FTD-Tau]
Describe Fluent progressive aphasia
• Normal sounding speech rate and production empty of content
• Begins with subtle word-finding changes
• Generic word and pronoun use spontaneous speech
• Profound single word comprehension difficulties
• Location of pathology
o Anterior temporal regions
• Typical pathology
• TDP-43 proteinopathy [FTD-TDP]
Describe Logopenic progressive aphasia
- Begins with subtle word-finding changes
- Poverty of speech output
- Occasional errors in syntax and phonology; poor sentence repetition
- Posterior perisylvian pathology
- Typical pathology
- Alzheimer’s disease