Top Banner
Language and the Brain Universidad de Santiago de Chile Lic. En Educación en Inglés Paradigmas Linguísticos Profesor: Miguel Farías Camila Contreras
29
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Language and the brain camila contreras

Language and the Brain

Universidad de Santiago de ChileLic. En Educación en Inglés

Paradigmas LinguísticosProfesor: Miguel Farías

Camila Contreras

Page 2: Language and the brain camila contreras

How is language actually stored in and process by the brain?

NeurolinguisticsNeurolinguistics the study of the neural and electrochemical bases of language development and use

PsycholinguisticsPsycholinguistics the study of the acquisition, storage, comprehension and production of language

Page 3: Language and the brain camila contreras

Physical Features of the Brain• It is divided into two nearly symmetrical

halves

Page 4: Language and the brain camila contreras

• Each part of the brain is responsible for processing certain kind of information

• They are connected by a bundle of nerves

Corpus callosum

• They communicate with each other

Page 5: Language and the brain camila contreras

Cortex

• A one-quarter-inch thick membrane that covers the brain

• It makes human beings capable of higher cognitive functions

• It contains most of language centers

• It is covered with bumps and depression

Page 6: Language and the brain camila contreras

• Even minor damage to the surface of the brain can result in language disorder

Page 7: Language and the brain camila contreras

Auditory Cortex

• Responsible for receiving and identifying auditory signals and converting them into a form that can be interpreted by other areas of the brain

Page 8: Language and the brain camila contreras

Visual Cortex

• It receives and interprets visual stimuli

• It is the storage site for pictoral images

Page 9: Language and the brain camila contreras

Motor cortex

• It is located in the upper middle of each hemisphere

• It is responsible for sending signals to your muscles

Page 10: Language and the brain camila contreras

Language Centers

• Production and comprehension of language

• They mainly only in the left hemisphere

Page 11: Language and the brain camila contreras

Broca’s area

• Located at the base of motor cortex

• Responsible for organizing the articulatory patterns of language and directing the motor cortex when we want to talk

• Control the use of inflectional morphemes and function morphemes

Page 12: Language and the brain camila contreras

Wernicke’s area

• Located near the back section of the auditory cortex

• It is involved in the comprehension of words and the selection of words when producing sentences

Page 13: Language and the brain camila contreras

Arcuate Fasciculus

• A bundle of nerve fibers that connect Broca’s area and Wernicke’s area

• So that they share information

Mental lexicon looks up words via wernicke’s area then say them via broca’s area

Page 14: Language and the brain camila contreras

Angular Gyrus

• Located between Wernicke’s area and the visual cortex

• It converts visual stimuli into auditory stimuli (and viceversa)

• Thus, we are allowed to match the spoken form of a word with the object it describes

Page 15: Language and the brain camila contreras

The flow of Linguistic Information

How all the areas of the brain work together to process language

It depends on»Type of stimulus»Type of linguistic result

Page 16: Language and the brain camila contreras

SpeakingWernicke’s area arcuate fasciculus broca’s

area motor cortex

ReadingVisual cortex angular gyrus wernicke’s area

UnderstandingAuditory cortex angular gyrus visual cortex

wernicke’s areabroca’s area motor cortex

Page 17: Language and the brain camila contreras
Page 18: Language and the brain camila contreras

Lateralization

• Each brain’s hemisphere is responsible for different cognitive functions

Left hemisphere Left hemisphere analytic reasoning, temporal ordering, arithmetic and language

Right Hemisphere Right Hemisphere processing music, perceiving non-linguistic sounds, performing task (visual and spatial skills or pattern recognition

Page 19: Language and the brain camila contreras

• It happens in early childhood

• It can be recovered in initial stage if damaged

Page 20: Language and the brain camila contreras

Contralateralization• The connections between the brain and

the body are almost completely contralateral

The right side of the body The right side of the body controlled by the left hemisphere

The left side of the body The left side of the body controlled by the right hemisphere

Page 21: Language and the brain camila contreras

Evidence

• Dichotic Listening Test

• Split Brains Patients

• Hemispherictomies

Page 22: Language and the brain camila contreras

Language Disorders

• Damage in the left hemisphere aphasia

• Aphasia Aphasia inability to perceive, process or produce language because of physical damage to the brain

• Linguistic skills affected depend on where the brain damage is

Page 23: Language and the brain camila contreras

Broca’s Aphasia• Haltingly speaking

• Speech without inflections and function words

• Problems in producing

• Articulatory problems

• Difficulty matching the correct semantic interpretation to the syntactic order of the sentence

Page 24: Language and the brain camila contreras

ExampleExaminer: Tell me, what did you do before

you retired?

Aphasic: Uh, uh, uh, uh, pub, par, partender, no.

Examiner: Carpenter?

Aphasic: (shaking head yes) Carpenter, tuh, tuh, tenty year.

Page 25: Language and the brain camila contreras

Wernicke’s Aphasia

• Receptive disorders

• Misinterpreting what others say and responding in unexpected way

• Tendency to produce semantically incoherent speech

• Fluent but meaningless speech

Page 26: Language and the brain camila contreras

Example

Examiner: Do you like it here in Kansas City?

Aphasic: Yes, I am.

Examiner: I’d like to have you tell me something about your problem

Aphasic: Yes, I, ugh, can’t hill all of my way. I can’t tal all of the things I do, and part of the part I can go alright………

Page 27: Language and the brain camila contreras

Conduction Aphasia

• Damage to the arcuate fasciculus

• Sth like wernicke’s aphasia but showing signs of being able to comprehend the speech of others

• Problems in transmission

Page 28: Language and the brain camila contreras

Alexia and Agraphia

• Both caused by angular gyrus damage

• Alexia Inability to read and comprehend written words

• Agraphia Inability to write words

Page 29: Language and the brain camila contreras

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WK29RAKDzf8