Vocabulary
Classification
Other Classifications
Site of Lesion
Miscellaneous
100

An acquired neurological communication disorder that results in impairment in expressive and receptive language but not intellect.

What is Aphasia?

100

Results from a lesion anterior of the central sulcus.  Characterized by effortful, agrammatic speech, good auditory comprehension and awareness of speech errors.

What is Broca's Aphasia 

100

Results from large lesions involving Broca's and Wernicke's area. Language characterized by severe impairments across all language modalities.

What is Global Aphasia?

100

Large perisylvian lesion, including frontal and temporal lobes and often the parietal lobe. 

What is Global Aphasia?

100

Impairment of writing with a lexical-semantic written breakdown.  Links betwen written words and their meanings are disrupted.  

What is Agraphia?
200

A word substitution that could be either phonemic or semantic in nature.

What is a Paraphasia?

200

Results from a lesion in the posterior portion of the superior temporal gyrus. Characterized by poor auditory comprehension, empty speech with paraphasias and neologisms, and limited error awareness.

What is Wernicke's Aphasia?

200

Gradual loss of ability to communicate and understand spoken and written language. Specific symptoms depend on the parts of the brain that are affected. Actually a form of dementia. 

What is Primary Progressive Aphasia?

200

Posterior portion of the superior temporal gyrus, Brodmann 22. 

What is Wernicke's Aphasia. 

200

Sounds and sight words are impaired, with difficulty understanding the meaning of written words. Abstract, low-frequency words are most difficult. Semantic errors are present in oral reading.

What is Central Alexia?

300

The repetition of a word or phrase when trying to express one's self. For example, "chicken, chicken, chicken".

What is a Perseveration?

300

Site of lesion is variable. Primary language characteristic is decreased word retrieval.

What is Anomic Aphasia?

300

Broca's Aphasia, Transcortical Motor Aphasia and Global Aphasia. 

What are non-fluent aphasias?

300

Inferior frontal lobe, Brodmann 44 and 45 (third frontal convolution frontal operculum) 


What is Broca's aphasia?

300

An impairment in motor programming and sequencing of movements of the articulators that may accompany non-fluent aphasia.

What is Apraxia of Speech?

400

The act of "talking around" what one is trying to say.  For example, "you know those things you wear on your feet."

What is a Circumlocution?

400

Results from a lesion involving the arcuate fasciculus. Good auditory comprehension, good recognition of errors with repeated attempts at correction, difficulty with word retrieval, and repetition.

What is Conduction Aphasia 

400
Transcortical Sensory, Conduction, Anomic and Wernicke's are example of what. 

What are Fluent Aphasias?

400

Acrulate fasciculus, supramarginal gyrus - Brodmann area 40. 

What is Conduction Aphasia?

400

This measure of discourse is calculated by dividing the total number of words in a sample by the number of correct content units. It provides a measure for the appropriate use of words in a picture description.

What is the Index of Lexical Efficiency?

500

In fluent aphasia, a person's speech may be faster than a typical speaker.

What is Logorrhea?

500

You have difficulty comprehending language, although your speech is fluent. Your sentences may have no obvious meaning or "empty" and circumlocutionary.  Your repetition is good but you have "ready made" stereotypical speech and echolalia.  

What is Transcortical Sensory Aphasia?

500

Your speech is fluent but varies when drowsy. Your comprehension of language is relatively good but you have reduced spontaneous speech.  

What is Subcortical Thalamic Aphasia?

500

Frontal lobe, watershed regions, Brodmann's areas 6, 8, 9, 10, and 46. 

What is Transcortical Motor Aphasia?

500

You are unable to recognize familiar objects and faces despite preserved visual acuity and visual field functions.  

What is Visual Agnosia?