Aphasia

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 24 фев 2015
  • What happens when we lose our ability to use language? What difficulties do we run into when studying language loss? In this week's episode, we look at aphasia, and particularly Broca's aphasia: what symptoms occur, why it's hard to make sweeping generalizations about what to expect, and what aphasia can tell us about how language works.
    This is Topic #24!
    This week's tag language: Brazilian Portuguese!
    Find us on all the social media worlds:
    Tumblr: thelingspace.tumblr.com
    Twitter: @TheLingSpace
    Facebook: thelingspace/
    And at our website, www.thelingspace.com!
    Our website also has extra content about this week's topic at www.thelingspace.com/episode-24/
    We also have forums to discuss this episode, and linguistics more generally.
    Looking forward to next week!

Комментарии • 27

  • @JuanGarutti
    @JuanGarutti 7 лет назад +5

    AAAAAAAAAAAAAhhh I've seen so many videos from LingSpace but this is the first one i've seen that Moti says goodbye in Portuguese! I'm brazilian and wasn't expecting that, it was so cool! ahhaha
    Great videos, guys! This channel is excellent. :)

    • @thelingspace
      @thelingspace  7 лет назад +2

      Glad you liked it! Thanks for watching. And it's nice when you catch the little languages we put at the end. I liked doing the Portuguese one. ^_^

  • @sadafkhan1679
    @sadafkhan1679 4 года назад

    Super informative n precise as always

  • @mcb1685
    @mcb1685 9 лет назад +4

    Hello! Thank you so much for this episode (I was really expecting it) and for all the great content you provide us all with. As a high school student who is very enthusiastic about languages and linguistics, this is definitely one of the best resources I've come across. One little thing: the link for the extra materials isn't working. Hope you can fix that soon!

    • @thelingspace
      @thelingspace  9 лет назад

      ***** Oh no! I'm sorry about that. I'll get that sorted out by this evening, once the new episode is together, and then I'll leave you another message here, so you'll know and be able to get over to it. Thanks for your kind words and for your patience! I hope you'll find them worth the wait. ^_^

  • @mimiturbano
    @mimiturbano Год назад

    Thank you. I have aphasia and don’t want to talk. It’s so hard to get my feeling out. My words don’t come out. It’s lonely.

  • @limignon6049
    @limignon6049 4 года назад +3

    Topic 24: The Pattern of Loss
    1:20 aphasia
    2:15 Brains are different
    3:50 Broca's aphasia: can understand, can't pronounce / wrong functional morphology
    7:33 CONCLUSION

    • @sadafkhan1679
      @sadafkhan1679 4 года назад

      love how u provide a summary with time stamps....really helpful....I look for ur comments in the ling space videos

  • @absquatulate10
    @absquatulate10 7 лет назад +2

    Anybody who is interested in recovery from aphasia, you should find out more about speech-language pathology. Speech-language pathologists help people with language disorders, and are key to helping people with aphasia recover. See more at www.asha.org!

  • @marumakoto
    @marumakoto 8 лет назад +1

    You explained everything so well! It would also help second language learners like me if there's an english subtitle. :)

    • @thelingspace
      @thelingspace  8 лет назад

      Thanks! And there should be English subtitles on it - we have them on all our episodes. Did it not work for you? From my end, it looks like it's turned on okay!

  • @teacherdkennedy
    @teacherdkennedy 9 лет назад +1

    I just gave a presentation on neurodiversity and one of the sections was about how there is no normal brain. I like the way you explain it!

    • @thelingspace
      @thelingspace  9 лет назад

      Diana Kennedy Thanks! Glad you liked it. It's really true! We just gloss by it and point at pictures of the brain, but it's all idealized. When you really want to get down to studying neurolinguistics, though, you always have to account for the individual variation, or you'll get things wrong.

  • @teacherdkennedy
    @teacherdkennedy 9 лет назад +1

    So, does this mean that if s student is diagnosed with an expressive language problem, separate from a receptive language problem, is it Broca's area as well? Or again, is this question not really linguistics?

    • @thelingspace
      @thelingspace  9 лет назад

      Diana Kennedy Hmmm. If we want to try to associate a specific brain region to the behavior, the area that'd be more likely to be implicated would be Broca's Area. But that's a broad statement; some problems, like difficulties with lexical retrieval, would be more likely associated with Wernicke's Area. But as a broad guideline, yeah, I'd agree with your statement there. Thanks for the question!

  • @catlover10192
    @catlover10192 8 лет назад +1

    How would this effect written language?

    • @absquatulate10
      @absquatulate10 7 лет назад

      It can! There are many reasons a person's written language may be affected, including fine-motor control, or language. That's why a thorough evaluation is crucial to getting the right kind of treatment.

  • @NixG97
    @NixG97 5 лет назад

    Can Aphasia be a result of Trauma as well?

    • @mimiturbano
      @mimiturbano Год назад

      Physical trauma ro your head yes - stroke or impact. Psychology traum - I’m not a dr but think it could because trauma is processed in brains - and emotional trauma impacts ,ore than I think we no

  • @daphnerodriguez9980
    @daphnerodriguez9980 7 лет назад

    POWERFUL! THANKS YOU! APHASIA MASSIVE STROKE 8YEARS APHASIA DAPHNE COTTON. ●BROWN FAMILY. 💜

  • @kennymclellan8956
    @kennymclellan8956 9 лет назад

    Aphasia...Houston,Johnstone,Scotland

    • @robertandersson1128
      @robertandersson1128 8 лет назад

      Aphasia is found in Houston, the biggest city in the American state Texas, and Johnstone, in the south west of Scotland.

  • @seymau2538
    @seymau2538 Год назад

    6:47

  • @notoriouswhitemoth
    @notoriouswhitemoth 8 лет назад +1

    So grammar and vocabulary are handled by different parts of the brain? Interesting.

  • @andyxyz01
    @andyxyz01 9 лет назад

    I guess that if you're experiencing aphasia, a part of your brain is Broken.

  • @MrWaheedbrohi
    @MrWaheedbrohi 6 лет назад +1

    lecture method and high pitch sounds really bad

  • @UsmanShah-lg8wn
    @UsmanShah-lg8wn 4 года назад

    Plz try to be a bit slow.. Means try to explain with patience.. So to get more otta ur video