Title of article
Bilingualism, brain injury, and recovery: Implications for understanding the bilingual and for
Author/Authors
Madelin Z. Marrero، نويسنده , , Charles J. Golden، نويسنده , , Patricia Espe-Pfeifer، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
Pages
16
From page
463
To page
478
Abstract
Psychologists and other therapists are seeing an increasingly large number of bilingual individuals. Such clients are a special challenge when there has been some type of brain injury or disease because of the seemingly unpredictable effect such disorders may have on language skills, impacting either or both of the clientʹs languages and interfering with internal speech that plays a role in higher cognitive functions such as insight and awareness. While there are many clinical assumptions about which language will show the least impairment or recover the best, such suppositions based on clinical lore are often contradictory. A review of the literature finds that the outcome of brain injury may be influenced by factors such as cerebral representation of a secondary language, method of language acquisition, age of acquisition, premorbid language proficiency, and style of learning in an individual. Neuropsychological concepts that can explain these findings are examined, along with their implications for therapy, and rehabilitation.
Keywords
rehabilitation , language , Neuropsychology , bilingual , aphasia
Journal title
Clinical Psychology Review
Serial Year
2002
Journal title
Clinical Psychology Review
Record number
483683
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