Damage to different regions in the left hemisphere produces aphasias
Damage to the left frontal lobe can produce nonfluent aphasias
Nonfluent aphasia: aphasias where the individual loses the ability to produce speech or experiences great difficulty in producing speech
An important type of nonfluent aphasia is Broca’s aphasia
Broca’s aphasia: a syndrome in which
speech production abilities are impaired
speech output is slow and halting, requires effort, and often lacks complexity in word or sentence structure
Nonfluent aphasics still understand speech though structurally complex sentences may be poorly understood
Damage to the left temporal lobe can produce fluent aphasia
Damage to the superior temporal lobes in both hemispheres produces word deafness
It was once believed all aspects of language were governed by the left hemisphere only
Speech production is a left-dominant function that relies on frontal and temporal lobe areas
Rare mutations of the FOXP2 gene impede learning to make sequences of mouth and jaw movements that are involved in speech
The middle and inferior temporal lobes are involved with finding the meanings of words
The anterior temporal lobe may be a participant in sentence-level comprehension
The left posterior temporal lobe has a sensory-motor circuit that may help with systems for speech recognition and production to communicate
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