A History of Neuropsychology. Группа авторов
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СКАЧАТЬ when speech was lost.

      Alexia and Agraphia in the Wake of Broca’s Discovery

      Ogle described a patient who wrote well after a stroke but whose speech production was sharply limited. The autopsy revealed a small area of softening in the posterior part of the left inferior frontal convolution. This location, according to Ogle, strongly supported Broca’s view of the brain area affected in atactic aphasia (Broca’s aphasia). However, because writing was unaffected, Ogle concluded “that the faculty of speech and the faculty of writing are not subserved by one and the same portion of the cerebral substance” (p 106). Still, the hypothesized speech and writing centers must be “closely contiguous” (p 100), since aphasia and agraphia so frequently occurred together [16].