chapter 14 Flashcards

1
Q

aphasia

A

difficulty in producing or comprehending speech not produced by deafness or a simple motor deficit; caused by brain damage

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2
Q

split brain operation

A

brain surgery that is occasionally performed to treat a form of epilepsy; the surgeon cuts the corpus callosum, which connects the two hemispheres of the brain

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3
Q

bilingual

A

the ability to communicate fluently in two languages

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4
Q

prosody

A

the use of changes in intonation and emphasis to convey meaning in speech besides that specified by the particular words; an important means of communication of emotion

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5
Q

Broca’s aphasia

A

a form of aphasia characterized by agrammatism, anomia, and extreme difficulty in speech articulation

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6
Q

function word

A

a preposition, article, and extreme difficulty in speech articulation

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7
Q

content word

A

a noun, verb, adjective, or adverb that conveys meaning

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8
Q

agrammatism

A

one of the usual symptoms of broca’a aphasia; a difficulty in comprehending or properly employing grammatical devices, such as verb endings and word order

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9
Q

anomia

A

difficulty in finding the appropriate word to describe an object, action, or attribute; one of the symptoms of aphasia

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10
Q

wernike’s area

A

a region of the auditory association cortex on the left temporal lobe of humans, which is important in the comprehension of words and the production of meaningful speech

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11
Q

wernike’s aphaisa

A

a form of aphaisa characterized by poor speech comprehension and fluent but meaningless speech

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12
Q

pure word deafness

A

the ability to hear, to speak, and usually to read and write without being able to comprehend the meaning of speech; caused by damage to Wernike’s area or disruption of auditory input to this region

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13
Q

transcortical sensory aphasia

A

a speech disorder in which a person has difficulty comprehending speech and producing meaning full spontaneous speech but can repeat speech; caused by damage to the region of the brain posterior to wernike’s area

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14
Q

circumlocutions

A

a strategy by which people with anomia find alternative ways to say something when they are unable to think of the most appropriate word

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15
Q

arcuate fasciculus

A

a bundle of axons that connects wenike’s area with broca’s area; damage causes conduction aphasia

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16
Q

conduction aphasia

A

an aphasia characterized by the inability to repeat words that are heard by the ability to speak normally and comprehend the speech of others

17
Q

pure alexia

A

loss of the ability to read without loss of the ability to write; produced by brain damage

18
Q

whole word reading

A

reading by recognizing a word as a whole; sight reading

19
Q

phonetic reading

A

reading by decoding the phonetic significance of letter strings; sound reading

20
Q

surface dyslexia

A

a reading disorder in which a person can read words phonetically but has difficulty reading irregularly spelled words by the whole word method

21
Q

direct dyslexia

A

a language disorder caused by brain damage in which the person can read words aloud without understanding them

22
Q

phonological dyslexia

A

a reading disorder in which a person can read familiar words but has difficulty reading unfamiliar words or pronounceable nonwords

23
Q

visual word form area

A

a region of the fusiform gyrus on the base of the temporal lobe that plays a critical role in whole word recognition

24
Q

developmental dyslexia

A

a reading difficulty in a person of normal intelligence and perceptual ability; of genetic origin or caused by prenatal or perinatal factors

25
Q

phonological dysgraphia

A

a writing disorder in which the person cannot sound out writes and write them phonetically

26
Q

orthographic dysgraphia

A

a writing disorder in which the person can spell regularly spelled words but not irregularly spelled ones