- Wernicke-Geschwind model
Carl Wernicke created an early neurological model of language, that later was revived byNorman Geschwind . The model is known as the Wernicke-Geschwind model.# For listening to and understanding spoken words, the sounds of the words are sent through the auditory pathways to area 41, which is the primary
auditory cortex (Heschl’s gyrus). From there, they continue to Wernicke’s area, where the meaning of the words is extracted.
# In order to speak, the meanings of words are sent from Wernicke’s area via thearcuate fasciculus to Broca’s area, wheremorphemes are assembled. The model proposes that Broca’s area holds a representation for articulating words. Instructions for speech are sent from Broca’s area to the facial area of themotor cortex , and from there instructions are sent to facial motor neurons in thebrainstem , which relay movement orders to facial muscles.
# In order to read, information concerning the written text is sent from visual areas 17, 18, and 19 to theangular gyrus (area 39) and from there to Wernicke’s area, for silent reading or, together with Broca’s area, for reading out loud.This model is now obsolete. Nevertheless it has been very useful in directing research and organizing research results, because it is based on the idea that language consists of two basic functions: comprehension, which is a sensory/perceptual function, and speaking, which is a motor function.
However, the neural organization of language is more complex than the Wernicke-Geschwind model of language suggests. The localization of speech in Broca’s area is one of the weakest points of this model. [Kolb & Whishaw: "Fundamentals of Human Neuropsychology", 2003]References
External links
* http://www.umich.edu/~psycours/345/lecture11/sld025.htm
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