All of these outcomes contribute to success in Wernicke's, Broca's, Global, and Conduction aphasia, and are detailed below:
22.
Recent research has challenged this notion on the basis that patients with conduction aphasia more often have lesions in the supramarginal gyrus or deep parietal matter.
23.
The Boston Diagnostic Aphasia Examination ( BDAE ) and the Western Aphasia Battery ( WAB ) are two commonly used test batteries for diagnosing conduction aphasia.
24.
Wernicke predicted the existence of conduction aphasia in his landmark 1874 monograph, " Der Aphasische Symptomenkompleks : Eine Psychologische Studie auf Anatomischer Basis ".
25.
Lesions in the language centers ( and connections between ) have been identified as potential inducers for conduction aphasia ( and other language disorders, in general ).
26.
Typical lesion location for conduction aphasia is on the supramarginal gyrus of the parietal lobe, posterior to the primary sensory cortex and just above Wernicke's area.
27.
Specifically, patterns of damage in conduction aphasia patients have been observed to cluster in the posterior and inferior temporal lobe, and in the parietal-temporal junction.
28.
Although the disconnection hypothesis explains many of the conditions associated with conduction aphasia, clinical evidence is lacking, and the Wernicke-Geschwind model has since become obsolete.
29.
To Freud and Goldstein, conduction aphasia was thus the result of a central, core language breakdown; Goldstein labeled the disorder " central aphasia ".
30.
After saying a sentence to a person with conduction aphasia, he or she will be able to paraphrase the sentence accurately but will not be able to repeat it.