Members in the Media
From: Los Angeles Times

Writing and speaking come from different parts of the brain, study shows

Los Angeles Times:

Written and spoken language can exist separately in the brain, a new study from Johns Hopkins shows. The study looked at stroke victims with aphasia that impaired their communication capabilities in one way but not the other.

Researchers at Johns Hopkins, Rice and Columbia universities studied five stroke patients with aphasia, difficulty communicating after their strokes. Four could speak but not write sentences that took a certain form — the study focused on affixes, such as the “-ing” in “jumping” — while the last could write those sentences but not speak them.

“Actually seeing people say one thing and — at the same time — write another is startling and surprising,” Johns Hopkins cognitive science professor Brenda Rapp told the website Futurity. “We don’t expect that we would produce different words in speech and writing. It’s as though there were two quasi-independent language systems in the brain.”

Read the whole story: Los Angeles Times

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