• Title of article

    Anomic Alexia of Kanji in a Patient with Anomic Aphasia

  • Author/Authors

    Yamawaki، نويسنده , , Rie and Suzuki، نويسنده , , Kyoko and Tanji، نويسنده , , Kazuyo and Fujii، نويسنده , , Toshikatsu and Endo، نويسنده , , Keiko and Meguro، نويسنده , , Kenichi and Yamadori، نويسنده , , Atsushi، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
  • Pages
    5
  • From page
    555
  • To page
    559
  • Abstract
    The ability to read aloud kanji (logogram) words and to comprehend their meaning was systematically examined to clarify the underlying mechanism of kanji alexia in a patient with anomic aphasia. Confrontation naming, reading aloud and reading comprehension tasks were performed using 110 words from 11 semantic categories written in kanji or kana. Performance in oral reading of kanji words was significantly worse than oral reading of the same words transcribed into kana words. In addition, for kanji words reading aloud was much worse than reading comprehension. Oral reading of kanji words had a significant correlation with naming pictures corresponding to the words, but no correlation with comprehension of kanji words. Qualitative analyses demonstrated that errors in oral reading and naming tasks had many features in common. Our results indicated that some common mechanisms underlie both naming and oral reading of kanji words. We propose calling this type of alexia “anomic alexia of kanji”, which should be distinguished from kanji alexia with difficulty in both reading aloud and comprehension. Lesions in our patient were located in the middle part of the left middle temporal gyrus and its subcortical area, which could be important for access to the phonological lexicon from semantics.
  • Keywords
    kanji , anomic aphasia , Alexia
  • Journal title
    Cortex
  • Serial Year
    2005
  • Journal title
    Cortex
  • Record number

    2299469