Aphasia broca s area

    • [DOC File]Type of Aphasia - University of Arizona

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      Anomic Aphasia fluent Fluent, normal utterance length and well-formed sentences Good for everyday conversation, difficulty with complex syntax preserved Impairment is hallmark Acute – outside perisylvian zona (angular gyrus or inferior temporal region), chronic- perisylvian area, posterior tempolateral region Conduction Aphasia fluent Fluent ...

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    • [DOCX File]doralacademyprep.enschool.org

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      Oct 08, 2012 · Aphasia. Broca's area. Wernicke's area. Agnosia. Damage to the cerebellum would most likely result in. heart stoppage or respiratory failure. a loss of hearing ability. a loss of muscular coordination. a reduction in emotional response. The endocrine system. is the only communications network in the body. depends on electrical messages for ...

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    • [DOC File]Psychology 285/202

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      Broca’s area, Broca’s aphasia: 3 major speech production deficits + comprehension deficit (See Figure 13.3 and results of Schwartz et al., 1980) Wernicke’s area, Wernicke’s aphasia Pure word deafness, transcortical sensory aphasia, autotopagnosia, anomic aphasia, conduction aphasia, arcuate fasciculus

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    • [DOC File]Syntactic processing (parsing)

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      Broca’s area (where the “articulatory image” for. the word is) II. Evaluating the classical model. A. Problems with claims about functional loss. 1. Broca’s aphasia . 3 reasons for believing that it’s more than just a problem moving the articulators: a. Broca’s aphasics often write like they speak. b. Many Broca’s aphasics sing ...

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    • [DOC File]Lecture 1 – Nerve Cells and Behavior – Kandel

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      a. Broca’s area. i. left frontal lobe near motor cortex. ii. lesion in this area undermines speech but not language comprehension (Broca’s aphasia) b. Wernicke’s area. i. left hemisphere at border between parietal and temporal lobes. ii. lesion in this area undermines comprehension but not speech (Wernicke’s aphasia) c. arcuate fasciculus

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