Language & Hemisphere Function Flashcards
What are the most common types of brain-injuries used to investigate language and the brain?
The most common types of injuries are called cerebro-vascular disorders, such as strokes and cerebral haemorrhages, which lead to localised loss of the brain’s blood supply. Damage is often confined to one of the two hemispheres.
What is Broca’s aphasia?
Broca’s aphasia is a loss of expressive speech, although the understanding of speech is intact.
What is Wernicke’s aphasia?
Wernicke’s aphasia is an impairment of speech comprehension, whilst speech production still functions.
Where are the Broca’s area and the Wernicke’s areas?
The Broca’s area lies in the base of the frontal lobe, the Wernicke’s area lies in the temporal lobe, close to the auditory cortex. Both zones are usually found only in the left hemisphere.
What is a conduction aphasia?
A conduction aphasia is damage to the pathways connecting Wernicke’s and Broca’s areas. It leaves speech production and comprehension intact but disconnected.
What is a global aphasia?
The destruction of both, Wernicke’s and Broca’s area, is called global aphasia.
What is the angular gyrus?
The angular gyrus is in the parietal lobe of the left hemisphere. It is part of our reading and writing system.
What is Alexia without agraphia ?
It is pure word blindness and happens when the angular gyrus is disconnected from the visual cortex.
The patient cannot read, although writing is unaffected.
What is developmental dyslexia?
It’s the most common form of reading difficulty. There’s no evidence of organic Brian damage, and it may be due to confusion between the hemispheres as language mechanisms are developing.
Why do we know much about functions localised to one hemisphere or the other?
Through Roger Sperry’s split-brain patients.
He cut the corpus callosum (major pathway connecting both hemispheres) in order to reduce the severity of chronic epilepsy.
Sperrt devised the divided field technique - without the corpus callosum the stimuli would be confined to the hemisphere to which the stimuli is presented (just one visual field).
Why could Sperry test each hemisphere with different stimuli?
He could test each hemisphere with a different stimuli, because the left hemisphere contained speech mechanisms and also controlled the right hand, while the right hemisphere controlled the left hand.
What is the basic Modell of hemisphere specialisation?
Hemisphere specialisation divides between verbal and Visuo-spatial processing.
Verbal: left hemisphere- comprehends letters, words, numbers.
Visuo-spatial: right hemisphere- can understand simple words but is better with faces and abstract patterns.
Why are Sperry’s split-brain patients not a representative group?
They’ve had severe epilepsy, probably due to brain damage, years of drug treatment, and major brain surgery
(Data needs to be supported with normal subjects).
How can Sperry’s divided field technique be modified for normal
subjects?
Pairs of stimuli are presented simultaneously to both hemispheres.
The stimulus reported indicates which hemisphere is superior at processing that type of stimulus.
A left hemisphere superiority leads to faster processing of stimuli in right visual field and vice Versa.
What is dichotic listening?
The auditory equivalent of the divided field.