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8 - Impairment of processing

from PART 2 - Processes and models

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

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Summary

Introduction

The preceding chapters have attempted to survey language functions in the individual, including the more peripheral structures and processes as well as the more central ones. In this chapter we shall be asking in what ways this spectrum of functions may be impaired as a result of damage to the neurophysiological substrate. This takes us into the field of aphasia research, or aphasiology. Because language is a complex of functions, its manifestations of impairment are not all the same, leading to a situation which some authorities characterise as different types of aphasia, and which others see rather as different forms of a single condition.

As distinct from the study of normally occurring, transient errors, we are dealing here with long-term, systematic impairments, though to some extent there may be change in certain of their characteristics over time, as a result of spontaneous recovery, or specific treatment, or both together. Naturally, enough, since we are dealing with linguistic consequences of damage to bodily tissue, medical influence in this field has been traditionally strong. Moreover, issues in this field have proved very complex, with problems in diagnosis and interpretation. This is perhaps what should be expected, given the already complex nature of normal language-processing. As a result, students have often found the field a difficult one to approach for the first time. Medically trained students find the linguistic terminology just as difficult as those from a linguistic background find the medical terms;

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Psycholinguistics , pp. 416 - 471
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1990

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