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Self-monitoring behavior in a case of severe auditory agnosia with aphasia
Authors:Robert C. Marshall   B. Z. Rappaport  Luis Garcia-Bunuel
Affiliation:1. Veterans Administration Medical Center, Portland, Oregon 97207 USA;2. Department of Neurology, Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland, Oregon 97207 USA
Abstract:This case report describes an unusual combination of speech and language deficits secondary to bilateral infarctions in a 62-year-old woman. The patient was administered an extensive series of speech, language, and audiologic tests and was found to exhibit a fluent aphasia in which reading and writing were extremely well preserved in comparison to auditory comprehension and oral expression, and a severe auditory agnosia. In spite of her auditory processing deficits, the patient exhibited unexpected self-monitoring ability and the capacity to form acoustic images on visual tasks. The manner in which she corrected and attempted to correct her phonemic errors, while ignoring semantic errors, suggests that different mechanisms may underlie the monitoring of these errors.
Keywords:Send requests for reprints to Robert C. Marshall   Ph.D.   Chief   Audiology and Speech Pathology Service (126)   V. A. Medical Center   Portland   OR 97207.
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