Lecture 5 - Psycholinguistics
Lecture 5 - Psycholinguistics
Articulation disorder: difficulties with the way sounds are formed and strung together usually
characterized by substituting one sound for another (wabbit for rabbit), omitting a sound (han
for hand) and distorting a sound (shlip for sip).
Voice disorder: characterized by inappropriate pitch (too high, too low never changing or
interrupted by breaks; quality (harsh, hoarse, breathy or nasal); loudness, resonance, and
duration.
Some of the causes of speech and language disorders are related to hearing loss, short
memory span, cerebral palsy and other neuromuscular disorders, severe head injuries, stroke,
viral diseases, certain drugs, physical impairments such as cleft lip or palate, and inadequate
speech and language models in the home environment. The majority of voice disorders in
children usually result from frequent vocal abuse associated with excessive throat clearing,
coughing screaming, or yelling. This abuse can cause inflammation of the larynx (vocal cords),
or the formation of nodules and polyps, which are small growths, on the vocal cords. Allergies,
smoking, and the consumption of alcoholic beverages are other factors which may adversely
affect the larynx (vocal cords) resulting in varying degrees of voice disorder.
Types of Aphasia:
Aphasia: the loss of speech and language abilities generally resulting from stroke.
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1- Broca’s aphasia:
In this type of aphasia, speech is hesitant and not fluent, with many stops and deficient
intonation. Both speech and writing lack grammar. This kind of aphasia also is characterised
by the incorrect use of grammatical morphemes (function words). Lexical morphemes are
used but phonologically deformed.
2- Wernicke’s aphasia:
A lesion in an area in the brain called Wernicke’s area causes this aphasia. Generally,
language comprehension and expression are affected. The person may be quite fluent but his
speech is meaningless. The utterances are made of indefinite noun phrases sequences of
actual or non-actual words. Comprehension and the ability to read and to repeat are
damaged.
3- Anomic aphasia:
This type of aphasia is characterised by the difficulty to find words. Some patients block and
may substitute the words they want to say. Others block even in writing.
4- Conduction aphasia:
While production and comprehension are whole, the ability is impaired. It is phonological.
There are errors in the sequencing and selection of segments.
The patient can speak and understand correctly but unable to read and write (alexia and
agraphia respectively). He / She can recognise individual letters but totally unable to read
them in combination. There is another type of aphasia that is characterised by word deafness.
The patient can speak, read, and write, but cannot understand spoken language.
From the above brief presentation of the types of aphasia, we can deduce that linguistics can
provide the description, analysis and classification of language disorders. The latter are
described in terms of the linguistic abilities of the patient- i.e. the four language skills:
speaking, comprehension, reading and writing.