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aphasia
(redirected from aphasic)

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aphasia

General term for the many types of disturbance in language that are due to brain damage, especially in the speech areas of the dominant hemisphere.

Classification systems are based on which part of the brain is thought to be affected or on which sensory or motor functions are impaired or language skills lost. The main types are: Broca's aphasia - patient's speech and writing severly affected but with full understanding of spoken and written language; Wernicke's aphasia - speech and writing affected in expression (errors in grammar, wrong and nonexistent words produced) and comprehension; conduction aphasia - lesion in the arcuate fasciculus, the pathway connecting Wernicke's area with Broca's, resulting in speech that is semantically abnormal, and difficulty in repeating sentences and reading aloud; aphasia due to lesions in the angular gyrus (a ridge on the side and towards the rear of the cortex) - difficulty in understanding spoken and written language and in naming objects; global aphasia - all language skills affected, presumably owing to lesions in both Broca's and Wernicke's area.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
Progressive nonfluent aphasia and subsequent aphasic dementia associated with atypical progressive supranuclear palsy pathology.
Some are maimed (an armless aphasic boy, a one-armed shop teacher); others are haunted by memories of those who have died (a murdered girl, cancer victims, and teens who had nothing better to do than drive their cars onto the ice and sink).
Referring to an aphasic tendency to open up to disparate cultural references, Andrew Mossin notes, "Narrative is immediately problematized, as the speaking subject emerges in halting, stammered lines from imaged particulars of a discretely displayed scene" (548).
 
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