46. Wernicke Aphasia „ Speech-Comprehension Problem“ - Fluent, abundant, well articulated, melodic Example: “Ah, yes, it's, ah… several things. It's a girl… uncurl… on a boat. A dog…'S is another dog… uh-oh… long's… on a boat. The lady, it's a young lady. An' a man a They were eatin‘.” (Elapsed time: 1 min 20 s)
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52. Brocas Aphasia „ Speech-Production Problem“ - nonfluent, effortful Example: “O, yea. Det's a boy an' a girl… an'… a… car… house… light po' (pole). Dog an' a… boat. ‘N det's a… mm… a… cofee, an' reading. Det's a… mm… a… det's a boy… fishin'.” (Elapsed time: 1 min 30 s)
Notes Cerebellum controls your balance, body posture, and muscle functions. By age 2, it has almost reached its adult size.
The brainstem controls unconscious work such as breathing, heartbeat, and blood pressure. This area of the brain holds the key to life itself.
The cerebellum is the key to balance, maintenance of body posture, and coordination of muscle function. The cerebellum ‘remembers’ such movements learned at a young age such as walking and grabbing.
The frontal lobes are responsible for allowing you to think of the past, plan for the future, focus your attention, solve problems, make decisions, and have conversation with others. This region is also responsible for thinking creatively and analytically in a problem-solving mode.
The brain must always know where each part of the body is located and its relation to it’s surroundings. The anterior part (front) is responsible for receiving incoming sensory stimuli. The posterior part (rear) is continuously analyzing to give a person a sense of spatial awareness.
Subdivisions cope with hearing, language, and some aspects to memory. Wernicke’s Area is critical for speech including reading. It allows us to comprehend or interpret speech and to words together correctly so they make sense. Broca’s area is behind the frontal lobes. This area is the center of our speech. It also relates to other language areas such as writing and reading.
This area gives a person the ability to see and observe.