Ravizza S M
Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley 94720, USA.
Brain Lang. 2001 Apr;77(1):95-118. doi: 10.1006/brln.2000.2435.
Research is reviewed concerning the performance of several neurological groups on the perception and production of voicing contrasts in speech. Patients with cerebellar damage, Parkinson's disease, specific language impairment, Broca's aphasia, apraxia, and Wernicke's aphasia have been reported to be impaired in the perception and articulation of voicing. The types of deficits manifested by these neurologically impaired groups in creating and discriminating voicing contrasts are discussed and the respective contributions of separate neural areas are identified. A model is presented specifying the level of phonemic processing thought to be impaired for each patient group and critical tests of the model's predictions are identified.
关于几个神经学群体在语音中浊音对比的感知和产生方面的表现的研究进行了综述。据报道,患有小脑损伤、帕金森病、特定语言障碍、布罗卡失语症、失用症和韦尼克失语症的患者在浊音的感知和发音方面存在障碍。讨论了这些神经受损群体在创造和区分浊音对比时表现出的缺陷类型,并确定了不同神经区域的各自贡献。提出了一个模型,指定了每个患者群体被认为受损的音素处理水平,并确定了对该模型预测的关键测试。