Pathological switching between languages after frontal lesions in a bilingual patient

Cerebral lesions may alter the capability of bilingual subjects to separate their languages and use each language in appropriate contexts. Patients who show pathological mixing intermingle different languages within a single utterance. By contrast, patients affected by pathological switching alterna...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of neurology, neurosurgery and psychiatry neurosurgery and psychiatry, 2000-05, Vol.68 (5), p.650-652
Hauptverfasser: Fabbro, Franco, Skrap, Miran, Aglioti, Salvatore
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container_title Journal of neurology, neurosurgery and psychiatry
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creator Fabbro, Franco
Skrap, Miran
Aglioti, Salvatore
description Cerebral lesions may alter the capability of bilingual subjects to separate their languages and use each language in appropriate contexts. Patients who show pathological mixing intermingle different languages within a single utterance. By contrast, patients affected by pathological switching alternate their languages across different utterances (a self contained segment of speech that stands on its own and conveys its own independent meaning). Cases of pathological mixing have been reported after lesions to the left temporoparietal lobe. By contrast, information on the neural loci involved in pathological switching is scarce. In this paper a description is given for the first time of a patient with a lesion to the left anterior cingulate and to the frontal lobe—also marginally involving the right anterior cingulate area—who presented with pathological switching between languages in the absence of any other linguistic impairment. Thus, unlike pathological mixing that typically occurs in bilingual aphasia, pathological switching may be independent of language mechanisms.
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subjects Aphasia
bilingual brain
Bilingualism
Biological and medical sciences
Brain Diseases - diagnosis
Brain Diseases - physiopathology
Fear & phobias
Frontal Lobe - pathology
Frontal Lobe - physiopathology
frontal lobes
Gyrus Cinguli - pathology
Gyrus Cinguli - physiopathology
Humans
Language
Language Disorders - physiopathology
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Medical sciences
Middle Aged
Multilingualism
Neurology
Neuropsychology
pathological switching between languages
Patients
Short Report
Tumors of the nervous system. Phacomatoses
title Pathological switching between languages after frontal lesions in a bilingual patient
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