Anand A, Wales R J
Royal Park Hospital, Parkville, Victoria.
Aust N Z J Psychiatry. 1994 Jun;28(2):229-38. doi: 10.1080/00048679409075633.
The existence of an aphasia-like language disorder in psychotic speech has been the subject of much debate. This paper argues that a discrete language disorder could be an important cause of the disturbance seen in psychotic speech. A review is presented of classical clinical descriptions and experimental studies that have explored the similarities between psychotic language impairment and aphasic speech. The paper proposes neurolinguistic tasks which may be used in future studies to elicit subtle language impairments in psychotic speech. The usefulness of a neurolinguistic model for further research in the aetiology and treatment of psychosis is discussed.
精神病性言语中类似失语症的语言障碍的存在一直是诸多争论的主题。本文认为,一种离散性语言障碍可能是精神病性言语中所见紊乱的一个重要原因。本文回顾了经典临床描述以及探索精神病性语言障碍与失语症言语之间相似性的实验研究。本文提出了神经语言学任务,这些任务未来未来未来研究中可用于引出精神病性言语中细微的语言障碍。本文还讨论了神经语言学模型在精神病病因学和治疗进一步研究中的有用性。