Language Flashcards

1
Q

What is language?

A

• A system for representing, communicating information about the world using symbols and rules

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2
Q

Describe the language groups

A

On image

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3
Q

What are the 5 functional components of language

A
  1. 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.
  2. 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
  3. 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’
  4. 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:
  5. 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’
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4
Q

Describe the cerebral organisation of language

A
  1. ARTICULATION and PHONOLOGY - brocca area
  2. MEANING in auditory complex
    a. Temporal poles
    b. Densely interconnected with widespread regions of association cortex
    c. ‘Modality-independent’representations
  3. 3) SYNTAX
    a. In left anterior frontal gyrus
  4. Comprehension
    a. Temporal poles
    b. Left inferior frontal gyrus
    c. Arcuate fasciculus
    d. Left posterior superior
    e. Temporal gyrus
    f. Primary auditory cortex
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5
Q

What are the 4 types of strokes?

A
  • Broca’s aphasia
  • Wernicke’s aphasia
  • Conduction aphasia
  • Adynamic aphasia
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6
Q

Describe Broca’s aphasia

A
  • 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
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7
Q

Describe Wernicke’s aphasia

A
  • 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
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8
Q

Describe Conduction aphasia

A
•	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
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9
Q

Describe Dynamic aphasia

A

• 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

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10
Q

What are the 3 types of neurodegeneration?

A
  • Nonfluent progressive aphasia
  • Fluent progressive aphasia
  • Logopenic progressive aphasia
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11
Q

Describe Non-fluent progressive aphasia

A
  • 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]
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12
Q

Describe Fluent progressive aphasia

A

• 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]

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13
Q

Describe Logopenic progressive aphasia

A
  • 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
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