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neurolinguistics
(redirected from Learning language)

   Also found in: Medical, Wikipedia 0.15 sec.

neurolinguistics

Study of the neurological basis of language, particularly how the brain controls the processes of speech, through the analysis of speech disorders. Both clinical disorders such as aphasia, where the patient is physically and mentally capable of using language but experiences problems, and ordinary ‘slips of the tongue’, are analysed to understand how the basic speech system can go wrong.



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This brain-based approach to intervention for struggling students has been shown to rapidly and efficiently enhance the fundamental learning skills (memory, attention, processing and sequencing) that form the foundation upon which efficient learning depends, specifically learning language and reading.
``There are children who need additional assistance -- in learning language, for example -- but that doesn't mean the time should be taken away from physical education.
Learning Language and Learning History: A Functional Linguistics Approach.
 
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