ABSTRACT

Theory and research in aphasiology have typically concentrated on a limited population--right-handed adult monolinguals whose language uses an alphabetic code. Bilingual individuals, ideographical code users, and children (among others) have been separated out. This book examines the available data from these "atypical" aphasics, asking whether what makes them different has a significant effect on language representation and processing in the brain. Each chapter reviews literature pertinent to a given population and explores whether (and potentially how) these populations differ from the "typical" aphasic population. The ultimate goal is to better understand whether the model of language used in aphasiology can be extended to these "atypical" populations, or conversely, whether significant differences merit the development of a new model.

chapter 2|32 pages

Aphasia in Bilinguals

How Atypical is it?

chapter 4|25 pages

Aphasia in Tone Languages

chapter 5|32 pages

Aphasia in Ideograph Readers

The Case of Japanese

chapter 7|58 pages

Crossed Aphasia