Friedman R B, Kohn S E
Department of Neurology, Boston University School of Medicine.
Brain Lang. 1990 Feb;38(2):278-97. doi: 10.1016/0093-934x(90)90115-w.
The role of the phonological lexicon in oral reading is examined in a patient with a small focal left hemisphere lesion. Impaired access to the patient's phonological lexicon is suggested by a number of findings, including the production of phonemic errors across a variety of tasks; increasing difficulty in word production with increasing word length; and difficulty on tests of homophone and rhyme judgments. Two competing models of reading are tested: the nonlexical ("rules") and the lexical ("no-rules") models. The rules model predicts that a disturbance in the phonological lexicon will result in surface alexia; the no-rules model predicts phonological alexia. Results indicate that the patient's reading is most similar to phonological alexia, providing support for the no-rules model. The applicability of the no-rules model to other forms of acquired alexia is explored.
在一名患有左侧半球局灶性小病变的患者中,研究了语音词汇在朗读中的作用。多项研究结果表明该患者获取语音词汇的能力受损,包括在各种任务中产生音素错误;随着单词长度增加,单词生成难度增大;以及在同音词和押韵判断测试中存在困难。测试了两种相互竞争的阅读模型:非词汇(“规则”)模型和词汇(“无规则”)模型。规则模型预测语音词汇的干扰将导致表层失读症;无规则模型预测语音失读症。结果表明,该患者的阅读与语音失读症最为相似,为无规则模型提供了支持。探讨了无规则模型对其他形式获得性失读症的适用性。