Buckingham Hugh W
Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Louisiana State University, 136B Coates Hall, Baton Rouge, LA 70808, USA.
J Hist Neurosci. 2003 Sep;12(3):292-303. doi: 10.1076/jhin.12.3.292.16674.
Walter Moxon wrote a well-timed paper in 1866 on aphemia with accompanying right sided hemiplegia. Like many other investigators of this apparent lopsidedness of the articulatory system for human speech. Moxon had to reconcile left hemisphere specialization for this function with the overriding law of symmetry, which for a large sector of the scientific community was a sine qua non of the anatomy and function of high level animal cognition. His reasoning was essentially that since the right dominant hand (and hence the left hemisphere) in some sense led overall bilateral limb movement patterns, that the right side of the tongue would lead whole tongue movement for articulation, the left side following in some mechanical sense. Thus, Moxon could link left hemisphere dominance for handedness as well as for speech. His theory was that "attention" was focused on the left hemisphere during limb movement development, under his assumption that the articulators were limbs as well as the arms and hands. The present paper will examine the professional life of Moxon and his 1866 paper, as well as the scant commentary that it has elicited in the literature on the history of left hemisphere dominance for the human articulatory function.
沃尔特·莫克森在1866年撰写了一篇关于失语症伴右侧偏瘫的适时论文。和许多其他研究人类言语发音系统这种明显不对称性的研究者一样,莫克森必须将左半球在这一功能上的特化与对称性这一压倒性规律协调起来,而对于很大一部分科学界人士来说,对称性是高级动物认知的解剖结构和功能的必要条件。他的推理基本上是,由于在某种意义上右手占主导(从而左半球)引领了整体的双侧肢体运动模式,那么舌头的右侧会引领整个舌头的发音运动,左侧在某种机械意义上跟随其后。因此,莫克森可以将左半球在利手以及言语方面的主导联系起来。他的理论是,在肢体运动发展过程中,“注意力”集中在左半球,他的假设是发音器官既是肢体,也是手臂和手。本文将审视莫克森的职业生涯及其1866年的论文,以及该论文在关于人类发音功能左半球主导历史的文献中所引发的极少评论。