I had a major left brain stroke when I was 31. I live in Canada so I received awesome care in rehab. Then, the place that I’ve worked at gave me another chance and hired me back. That’s where I really learned English again. Took me 3 years to be able to say what I wanted to say. Ever intelligent, I found it really disturbing that I could do everything except say the words in English. I became very fluent in gibberish (and swearing!) My English isn’t that good when I write. But I’m still improving 16 years later. I could go on and on talking about my stroke. But, all in all, I very happy that I made it back. People don’t recognize that something is altered in me. But, that is ok.
@jimmackey2909 Жыл бұрын
Major TBI at age 15. Now 75. Believe me I understand the 'joys' of invisible injuries.
@deannacheng2234 Жыл бұрын
🧡🧡🧡
@flmis8 ай бұрын
Are you healthy again now? I can't imagine not being able to speak, I would've a meltdown. Luv from San Francisco!
@darrowoflykos49098 ай бұрын
Glad you’re better. If you don’t mind me asking, what caused you to have a stroke so young? (Only asking bc I’m super paranoid about this for myself)
@cynsen8 ай бұрын
@@darrowoflykos4909 my stroke was caused by an atrial myxoma, a benign tumour that was clogging the inside of my heart (and is present it about 1% of the population). The tumour leaked a part of itself in my heart, the bit when to the brain and caused a stroke. I had heart surgery to remove it and, after learning my English back, I’m good. Your chances of having the same kind of stroke is very, very rare. The biggest hint was, even though I was fit, even as a child, I had very poor long distance running. I would be overcome with trying to catch my breath. Even walking up 2 flights of stairs. It was awful. But ya, the word stroke is an umbrella term for a whole lot of things and reasons. Anyone can get a stroke. Stay healthy!!
@AngryKittens Жыл бұрын
The fact that our brain basically needs so much energy in large part due to the necessity of processing visual and verbal communication is still so wild to me. Talking must have been really really important to the success of our ancestors.
@MerchManDan Жыл бұрын
Just like Stephen Hawking once said: "For millions of years, mankind lived just like the animals. Then something happened which unleashed the power of our imagination. We learned to talk and we learned to listen. Speech has allowed the communication of ideas, enabling human beings to work together to build the impossible. Mankind's greatest achievements have come about by talking, and its greatest failures by not talking."
@stephanzielinski7922 Жыл бұрын
SEZ YOU
@GregoryTheGr8ster Жыл бұрын
But most people use language for gossip and discussing the latest episode of their favorite reality TV show.
@Beryllahawk Жыл бұрын
I read an article a long time ago that basically said it seems like humans evolved to communicate with anything and everything. To be honest my absolute worst fear is becoming unable to speak... Language is how we connect to others, mind to mind, and yeah, it's got to be one of THE most important things about us.
@UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana Жыл бұрын
Or other forms of communication.
@clivematthews95 Жыл бұрын
Aphasia is, simply, just awful 😢 Neurodegeneration is one of the things that scares the hell out of me 😱 I’m thankful there’s such people as neuropsychologists ❤
@pbsstoried Жыл бұрын
They do such important work!! - Dr. B
@Max_Le_Groom Жыл бұрын
At least he's lived a long life.
@athena8794 Жыл бұрын
MS runs in my family. Knowing my brain might melt in my 40s has haunted me since middle school.
@rosacastro505 Жыл бұрын
me too... I actually had a tumor removed and I am constantly doing whatever I can to keep my brain function sharp. But some days its like fog soup
@NocturnalDoom Жыл бұрын
@@Max_Le_Groomand a very successful and privileged one too 😉 in a good way. Like, he’ll get care most people would dream to be able to afford.
@ingridfong-daley5899 Жыл бұрын
I suffered a TBI in 2017 while living overseas, and the combination of general memory/identity loss and random aphasia turned me into a recluse because my linear expression was so disrupted that my mind began trying to use symbols--math, geometric shapes, distances, etc--to explain concepts and relationship patterns between larger thoughts. I'd been a lifelong writer/journaler before that, but having words 'taken away' from me didn't stop my compulsive drive to attempt communication. It just became a lot of music and images--pictures, drawings, algebraic expressions--in those moments where 'words' ceased to happen.
@thetimetravellingtailor6323 Жыл бұрын
I am autistic and find that I can really relate to the concept of aphasia causing difficulty in expression even when your thinking is still the same. Because of my disorder I often experience a similar thing and have before described it as being like my first language isn't truly "native" to me - I have to translate between my thoughts and my expression. This especially comes out when I am very fatigued and will speak in a very similar way to what was shown for the expressive aphasia example and speaking only in "key concepts". As a child that went undiagnosed I have had a lot of struggle with my way of speaking, it still makes me anxious (especially when my mind gives me a word from an entirely different language I know and then I have to translate again haha) but I love my voice now - mainly because the people I know now love to talk with me even if I speak strangely. My friends love me for it, not in spite of it.
@amachine6556 Жыл бұрын
I can 100% relate to this. It’s weird, when I’m really tired it feels like “fog” between my thoughts and my expression. I also forget how to talk when I’m under (usually emotional) stress. All the words are in my head but I literally don’t know how to talk. Words just won’t come out. I also experience the other version, where I don’t unterstand spoken language anymore. It sounds like mumbling in the background and feels really bad, mostly because I have to try to get away from voices which is harder than you’d think. Realising that I’m completely unable to communicate (mostly because people usually don’t believe me) is really irritating. Both of these conditions gradually go away when I manage to calm down, but it’s still a shocking experience. Imagine suffering from this permanently due to brain injury or damage, that must be so hard to live with…
@claudioclaudio79539 ай бұрын
Recently diagnosed autistic here. Yep, that relates to me as well
@Lesserthannone2 ай бұрын
Don't you just love trying to communicate through emotional overload and being called a lier because you took to long to say something
@ingridc0ld12 күн бұрын
Also an autist, and I relate to aphasia as well despite being good with words-- like I was able to speak in full sentences at just 8 months old. There's a disconnect somewhere in the abstraction part of processing for me that makes it hard for me to understand social cues.
@misersmakeup-nguoihatien2316 Жыл бұрын
What we found out about how the brain is so hard wired to value language, even above reasoning, motor/visual/spatial skills, and how much a person's development (in this case, language) is so dependent on other people, just fly in the face of those who would preach "social Darwinism" or some bullshit along that line. It simply doesn't even have a biological basis. This proves that in order to produce healthy individuals, we need to build society that allow us to hold on to even the most vulnerable and take care of each other. It also doesn't go unnoticed to me that you always make an effort to include people who communicate differently (with sign language) and to depict figures of ethnicities that's not always white in your videos. Thank you so much.
@thehomeschoolinglibrarian Жыл бұрын
My daughter has what is now a mild expressive speech delay and in going through speech therapy with her I really learned a lot about what it takes to speak words. There are so many movements involved in making words that as normal speaking adults we never think of. Also it takes time to develop the ability to make different sounds. My daughter is about to turn 4 and she went from maybe 5 words at age 2 to more words then I can count now. She is still hard to understand sometimes but watching her go from barely talking to nonstop talking has been an interesting journey. Human language is such and interesting and complicated thing and I loved learning about it in this video.
@MegaCatGirl13 Жыл бұрын
My mother had a stroke and it affected her ability to talk, she described it as having a word you can't quite grasp right on the tip of your tongue, except for every single word. Oddly, only her native language was affected, her secondary were fine. Today she can talk well again, except for a stutter, which she doesn't mind.
@danielzhang1916 Жыл бұрын
yes, it has happened to people who wake up speaking something else, not even a language they know, very strange
@TheEileen8 ай бұрын
That was me after TBI, I could pull the word in a different language but not my native one!
@kenster8270 Жыл бұрын
These videos are always super enlightening and educational. And off-topic, but for some reason I find it reassuring that Dr. Tan finishes his answers with a nod and a smile to signal that he's ready for the next question. I bet he's a great educator/mentor to someone. Great communicator with a great smile+nod. :)
@wendychavez5348 Жыл бұрын
I don't think that's off topic! He's communicating non-verbally, expressing his eagerness to share his knowledge with anyone who's interested. Very encouraging, very comfortable. Can I imagine that he was on my neurological team after my brain injury?
@danielzhang1916 Жыл бұрын
good doctors are always ready to share their experience and knowledge, to further enrich people's understanding
@danidejaneiro8378 Жыл бұрын
One thing that fascinates me about language is that we can’t not learn it. As long as we’re exposed to a language (and conditions are right), we will definitely learn it. We have no choice.
@blueprairiedog3 ай бұрын
And kids so readily learn language they're exposed to! It's like the brain wants to learn it.
@burrahobbit Жыл бұрын
I had a brain injury and especially in the beginning I had a lot of trouble getting the right words out. One funny example was that I could never manage to say the word "cucumber" and would always say "celery." I work in a restaurant so this came up pretty often. I need to talk about a long green vegetable that starts with C and I guess "celery" is good enough.
@TheFranchiseCA Жыл бұрын
This sounds a lot like me. I want the name of a color, my brain gives me a color. Not always the right color, but a color.
@monicaluketich69138 ай бұрын
Time- I may want Tuesday but say week. I was hit in my head with a metal garage door 16 yrs ago (I was 52 yrs old) that resulted in traumatic brain injury. I started taking voice lessons (singing) and eventually regained my speech, even though the neuropsychologist who tested me at the beginning didn't think it would work.
@hive_indicator318 Жыл бұрын
Your last question to him is genius and should be included in every interview ever!
@jlofty281 Жыл бұрын
7:32 this reminds of something my mom told me about her high school Spanish teacher. From what I remember, her first language was English and her second was Spanish, and later in life got into a car accident that damaged her language ability for English, but she was still mostly fluent in Spanish. There were some days where she just could not speak English at all, but since she had that backup she was still able to communicate until she was recovered enough to speak English again
@danielzhang1916 Жыл бұрын
yes, there are others who woke up speaking Chinese all of a sudden, we don't know how the brain does this, but it doesn't go away and English comes back after a period of time
@anthonyfrench3169 Жыл бұрын
Foreign Accent Syndrome (FAS) is another interesting language disorder and really is something that should make for a good episode. Especially, in talking about Broca and Werneke area
@meierboy97 Жыл бұрын
I have an inflammatory seizure disorder called encephalitis, and my inflammation and seizures were mostly effected in my right temporal lobe and it really effected my memory, I was in a coma for almost 5 days and they took a brain sample and found CNS vasculitis. I've never had this problem because my newer inflammation was on the right front side of my brain, my memory was really badly effected. Thankfully that was about a year and I'm doing waaaay better. I've had all the tests she's mentioned and more.
@srwapo Жыл бұрын
I recently had an issue in my brain and now remembering nouns is hard. Especially names. It's fun!
@ninamo3523 Жыл бұрын
Very timely, excellent explanation. Thank you.
@Resavian Жыл бұрын
I always get so excited when I see a new episode drop,. I am very much a lay person but I love language amd the study thereof so very much. Thank you for always making my day far more interesting
@grr-OUCH Жыл бұрын
At the end, she mentions swearing. Fun fact: many people with dementia swear a lot more than they did before. "My mom would never swear!" "You want to bet on that?" ;D
@CyanDreams1312 Жыл бұрын
I become aphasic during some of my psychogenic seizure episodes, Im loving learning more about how language works in the brain
@cynthiadefillippi3749 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for including signed languages
@jamieyoung3770 Жыл бұрын
Regarding the 7:33 mark... Take that, Hank Green! I remember specifically in one of your sci show episodes you said that there is no good science behind learning a second language as being helpful to the brain, and that its benefits are all way overblown. Also get well soon. Despite my note above, you still are a national treasure.
@Mountlougallops Жыл бұрын
I experienced aphasia and still have it a little once in a while. Like simply saying my name. I had several tbi’s and have post concussive syndrome issues. I'm very lucky to have neuroplasticity and have healed a lot.
@youremakingprogress144 Жыл бұрын
What a wonderful and important episode. It gives hope along with information and empathy. Aphasia would be devastating for me, and I'm so glad to hear how much potential there is for recovery from it.
@Domdrok Жыл бұрын
I love the tapping sound at 8:02. Also, what a cute outtake! "Oh noooooo!" lol
@NonBinary_Star Жыл бұрын
yesss! same
@ericacook2862 Жыл бұрын
I wonder what would be learned if they studied people like me with severe dyslexia. I know scientists found a decade or so ago that our Wernicke's and Brocas area, but I also know we use more global brain skills for things like reading and our visual processing is stronger than the neurotically brain. We always look at these things as what went wrong. It would be great if someone asked what went different.
@NonBinary_Star Жыл бұрын
Yeah. Totally. I agree 👍🏿
@TheFranchiseCA Жыл бұрын
I know dyslexia is more common in languages where pronunciation is not consistent, like English.
@charlessalzman4377 Жыл бұрын
Jan Berry, of Jan and Dean (Vocal Surf Rock duo from the '60's) got in a car accident and suffered brain damage that caused paralysis and aphasia. There's a pretty good biopic about the dou and it deals pretty extensively with Jan's attempts to sing again. Jan and Dean's song include Surf City (cowritten between Jan and Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys), Dead Man's Curve, and The Little Old Lady (from Pasadena) It's interesting that singing is sometimes the way around language issues. Some stutterers have no problems when they sing, and some stroke victims are able to sing their words post stroke. Singing utilizes a good portion of the right brain.
@ainsel98 Жыл бұрын
I get migraines and part of the aura (non-pain symptoms) is a period (usually 15-30 minutes) of aphasia and I can tell you it's horrible because you're sitting there and you know you're being talked to and you know you want to say something but your thoughts are jumbled and your speech is even more jumbled and so you can tell that people are concerned but you can't talk to them - it's horrible and I'm truly blessed that it goes away again for me and I really hope the best for anyone experiencing it
@RickyMaveety5 ай бұрын
I had aphasia as a result of an intense fever when I was about 28. Back then there wasn’t much help for it (I’m 71 now) but eventually my brain rewired itself.
@BrianOSheaPlus Жыл бұрын
I had an ischemic stroke in my left frontal lobe last year, and for the first hour before I got treatment I was paralyzed on my right side and I had expressive aphasia, although I could understand other people talking. After getting tPA to dissolve the blood clot that caused my stroke, my language ability mostly came back, except for some difficulty reading English (my first language). Oddly, I did not have difficulty reading a second language that I learned as an adult that uses a different script. Over the following days, my language ability completely recovered, and most of my physical abilities recovered.
@danielzhang1916 Жыл бұрын
yes, some people woke up speaking another language that they never learned as well, we still don't know why it is
@BrianOSheaPlus Жыл бұрын
@@danielzhang1916 I've never heard of someone walking up speaking a language they've never learned. Are there documented cases of this happening?
@writethatdown100 Жыл бұрын
I'm curious whether aphasia affects people using sign language, and if so, does it affect language any differently?
@Somebodyherefornow Жыл бұрын
not really different probably
@GaasubaMeskhenet Жыл бұрын
And how does it affect writing There are at least 3 kinds of aphasia. Surely not all of them effect sign and script the same
@pbsstoried Жыл бұрын
@tauntingeveryone7208 is right! The modality of language, whether signed or spoken (or even written) is similarly affected by damage to the left hemisphere. Sign languages really illustrate how aphasia truly is a language impairment, not just affecting verbal communication or speech sounds! - Dr. B
@monicaluketich6913 Жыл бұрын
@pbsstoried I have a question. Years ago I learned some sign language. When I got very tired, I would not be able to say words but could sign? Why?
@daltongrowley5280 Жыл бұрын
I love otherwords so much! please keep putting out videos! you guys are great!
@datafoxy Жыл бұрын
I did not realize the differences in the aphasias, thank you.
@chriswixtrom65144 ай бұрын
This was fascinating! Thank you for making it! I appreciate how you often include mentions of and images of sign language. I work with Deaf people and am glad to see them and their language and culture recognized.
@Batmit3 Жыл бұрын
I have MDD and personally learning a new language was so rewarding and help me cope with my disability, dopamine is my best friend.
@Kuwagumo Жыл бұрын
Excellent video! I learned quite a few new things!
@Jayjay-qe6um Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this very important information.
@moonprincesst.s.h.4ever115 Жыл бұрын
I have Cerebral Palsy and I have to use a communication device. The speech center part of my brain is partly damaged and filled with fluid, so my speech isn't understandable by most people.
@TheKrispyfort Жыл бұрын
I get PTSI related spontaneous mutism. Loose my internal dialogue along with. Fortunately, singing and sign still works
@PokhrajRoy. Жыл бұрын
I love watching videos from this channel ❤
@artistlovepeace Жыл бұрын
You all do such a great job! Thank you! Thank you! Thank you!
@macsnafu10 ай бұрын
I knew somebody recently who apparently had some kind of brain damage. She seemed perfectly capable of understanding what people were telling her, and of conducting her life, but when she would say something, the right words never seemed to come out. I would struggle so much to understand what she was trying to say--it was so difficult and frustrating.
@DoctorandtheDoll Жыл бұрын
As a psychometrist (working under three pediatric neuropsychologists) who also has a background in modern languages (particularly French)... I've never felt like a video was so tailored to me ha ha.
@oganvildevil Жыл бұрын
We really need to switch to arm processers at this point. The old system is just too energy hungry. Legit tho, after an on the job head injury parts of my vocabulary abruptly changed, even including things like my rhythm and cadence. It wasn't an active problem so doctors were never interested in looking into it, but I've always wondered just exactly what changed
@NonBinary_Star Жыл бұрын
farewell x86 helloooo arm
@badfaith4u Жыл бұрын
I love the videos that guys make and upload.
@Jasonwolf14953 ай бұрын
It makes sense to try and save communication when other systems are failing because as social animals we can ask others for help. To lose communication is to truly be alone.
@asmith8692 Жыл бұрын
My nephew and his daughter have a neurodivergence that is an auditory issue. They are unable to process how the words they speak sound. They need a speech pathologist to help them know how words feel in their mouths.
@jerseygirlinatl7701 Жыл бұрын
I too have Auditory Processing Disorder and it affects things you never think of, like spelling. You may have a dictionary and now spell checker (thank God), but if someone asks you to spell word, you will still do it verbally. If a kid asks you to spell exaggerate, what are the chances you start with 'e-g-g'? And with English some words verbally don't match as written (sarcastic). My diagnosis at 16 said I a college reading level but 6th grade spelling level. There are many ways it can affect your life. Saying 'conservation' vs 'conversation'; Trying to take notes in class; Trying to learn a new language.
@asmith8692 Жыл бұрын
@@jerseygirlinatl7701 didn't realize that it also affects spelling. But nephew also has dyslexia so spelling issues were probably mistakenly tied to that. He insisted that the school get a speech pathologist instead of a speech therapist for his daughter and son. His son doesn't have Auditory Processing Disorder but he's modeled his speech on his older sister. Luckily she's 10 and he's 5, so they are getting the help they needed early.
@Pleasestoptalkingthanks Жыл бұрын
Yo! I have that! But for me, I hear words all jumbled and fuzzy, sometimes I also stutter heavily despite having the words in my brain.
@mathieuleader8601 Жыл бұрын
when I was a kid I read a Roald Dahl short story called the Vicar of Nibbleswicke about the Reverend Lee who had a fictional form of dyslexia called Back to Front dyslexia but this dyslexia variant in the story to me behaved more like Wernicke's aphasia.
@lamegoldfish6736 Жыл бұрын
My noggin has hit pavement so many times, I am quite surprised that my language is still as well as it is.
@wanton_josh Жыл бұрын
good*
@wanton_josh Жыл бұрын
Well is used incorrectly there
@cyclenut4 ай бұрын
There is a language that I call "the unspoken language" When one smiles or cries are very clear unspoken talking. If one can watch high school or college boys and girls pairing up you should see body (unspoken) language. And it will be much the same from pair to pair. It is possible for one who has really strong in unspoken to carry a conversation without speaking aloud.
@samwill7259 Жыл бұрын
Considering the movies WIllis has been MAKING for the last 5 years we might have asked him to retire sooner. But considering what we know now about how Hollywood pays the people who make the things they sell, he might not have had ENOUGH to retire.
@Exexorder111106 күн бұрын
Great content . Some long form documentaries would be great for us old geysers with long attention spans
@isavanstraelen2654 Жыл бұрын
Such an interesting video! Clear explanation!
@SimplySchaun Жыл бұрын
When I was 25, i tried to unalive myself. I wont go into details but I used pharmaceuticals. I dont remember much but i do remember when i finally woke up in the hospital i couldnt speak. I understood what everyone was saying to me, i knew what i wanted to say but when i went to say it, nothing would come out. It was very scary and i dont wish it on anyone. Fortunately, my attempt was unsuccessful and i finally found my words again.
@iqbaalannaafi761 Жыл бұрын
Hello, Dr. Brozovsky. Would you like to do a video about phobias, and how phobias got their names, sometime later? You may invite Dr. Emily Zarka from Monstrum if you like!
@pbsstoried Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the great suggestion! I'll keep it in mind :) - Dr. B
@jonesnori5 ай бұрын
Migraines can occasionally cause aphasia, too. It's never happened to me, but a friend had an incident where they went to choir practice and could sing, but couldn't understand speech. I believe they told me that they couldn't remember that music the next week at all. (I may have some details wrong.) Their doctor later said that migraine can imitate any number of brain problems.
@samielkhayri9272 Жыл бұрын
Your videos are always interesting and informative. It's always a treat when you put out a new video. ❤
@OUTSIDER40 Жыл бұрын
This was very educational thank you 👍
@zhisu2665 Жыл бұрын
my mum suffered a brain hemorrhage years ago and still struggles with words, I do too but I have different condition
@MOSMASTERING10 ай бұрын
Does aphasia affect ability to comprehend, or is it only difficulty finding words to communicate? It's incredible that the brain prioritises language over other skills, because you'd imagine that language would be one of the later skills that humans developed in evolutionary terms.
@백인줄어든다4 ай бұрын
Brain health is crucial ~~ it turns heads that brain prioritizes language function and crowds out other function to preserve it;;
@mycount64 Жыл бұрын
80 percent of what we see is created in the brain 20 percent is input from outside
@jankay8569 Жыл бұрын
That was sooo interesting! Btw what happened to F&F series?
@zeusathena264 ай бұрын
They discovered a tumor in my husband's brain when he was 10 years old. It wasn't cancer, & they tried to get the tumor out, but couldn't. They did put in a shunt. He was in a coma for a year, & a half. He woke up, & had to relearn how to walk, talk, read, write, everything. He is very intelligent, he just processes slower. Imagine we are all on high speed internet, but he's on grandma's dialup. He'll get it all, but just needs some extra time. Unfortunately due to his brain damage, his seizures, & prescriptions causes a lot of forgetfulness, & an inability to create new memories. So he can study all day, & he'll only remember a portion of it. So we go back to where he does remember, & go from there. They believe no his tumor will not grow, & that it's a shame they tried to get it out. That's what caused the majority of the damage. He has lots of communication troubles, especially around seizures. We use sign language to communicate during these times.
@KeithCooper-Albuquerque Жыл бұрын
Excellent video!
@ScarletCandlelight Жыл бұрын
There is also one for those born with it this one is normally a damage or complicated distation in the woum or a hard birth on the baby. I have such a hard time understanding what I hear. I have to take a long time to prosses what is said to me
@pul0y Жыл бұрын
do other nonverbal languages like signing use the same pathways?
@christianhughes1567 Жыл бұрын
It would be really interesting to see an episode devoted to at least 2 of the classical figures in language like Saussure and Peirce. The brain is super interesting but language involves a whole lot more in addition to just the brain. Language is ultimately a *social* phenomenon and it is therefore *socially grounded* . No sign in any language can be interpreted in isolation from the language at large; and because of this figures, like Saussure have called into question the seemingly common sense notion of *reference* . The common sense view that words refer directly to things in the world has been challenged by Saussure and others arguing that meaning is not derived directly from things in the world but from the way that each language imposes its relational system on the continuum of thought. A language can be looked upon as a network whereby each "node" or sign/word in the network *SOLELY* gets its value from how it differentiates itself to other nodes/signs/words/ in the network. In other words, language plays a direct role in how we parse reality. Many scientists today seem to *believe* ... that consciousness is mere illusion. Well, given the kind of language we always seem to use when we talk about our brains (idiomatic habits like): 1. "your brain is always changing" 2. "your brain activates the fight/flight response" 3. "the brain recognizes patterns" etc... It's always struck me as sort.. of... I dunno... *weird* that we always talk about our brains in the 2nd person point of view. Why? Am I not my brain? Always talking about our brains in the 2nd person makes it sound like as if I, me - that I'm just this empty fleshy marionette, and my brain (separated from me) is in the back controlling me like a puppeteer. And if I'm just an empty marionette with my brain doing all the controlling, there would appear to be no room for consciousness. I think it's not too far-fetched to say that these people think consciousness is an illusion partly as a side effect from how we use language.
@grr-OUCH Жыл бұрын
I have known some people that were able to talk again after speech therapy. It can work.
@sortingoutmyclothes8131 Жыл бұрын
I just took a class in university about Neurolinguistics. It's actually very complicated.
@TheKrispyfort Жыл бұрын
Thanks 🙂
@ShadowWalker-vq7kb Жыл бұрын
My TBI effected words big time 5 years later when I write I have trouble with simple words 4 letter words that start with w. Like what went with I have trouble spelling them. My spelling over all is still broken. Before the injury I could communicate in half a dozen languages now barely one.
@shawnkerr Жыл бұрын
OK, what came first Zee or Zed? Since when was it ok to spell a consonant with a different consonant? Zed would be the only consonant spelled with a different consonant.
@thetonykhang Жыл бұрын
Knowledge is power!
@jimmackey2909 Жыл бұрын
Major car accident at age 15, brain injury (TBI) primarily to left side of brain plus frontal lobe. Having said that, English has always been my favorite 'toy'. Puns, unexpected correlations between words or concepts. Even consider myself an osteosynchrondroitrician. lol Now at age 75 I find that finding the correct word verbally can at times be a trial yet not as difficult to write the thought. In many cases, verbally or written, the correct word will be in the 'stream' of words I am about to use but at the moment of need it will be gone. Frustrating. I am wondering if the loss of substantial memory function (it has improved over the 60 years) from the TBI can be having an impact on the word find function. The brain is fascinating and worthy of much more study. It is said that a majority of the sea floor is unknown, I would say that that knowledge is far greater than what we know of the brain and its subtleties.
@cinthiaMP Жыл бұрын
i wonder how sign language fits into this. although sign language has grammar and structure just like spoken language, maybe the fact that, generally speaking, one single sign corresponds to a word/concept might make it easier to comunicate
@icedirt9658 Жыл бұрын
Sounds like my migraines must travel through brocas area
@ferguskidd Жыл бұрын
The verbal content was wonderful. The background music hurt my brain.
@WorldWarIVXX Жыл бұрын
Aww....Legend! I'd recognize those unicorns anywhere.
@UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana Жыл бұрын
I tend to think the left brain is dominant for things the subconscious thinks through and the right for what consciousness thinks through.
@richiegrey5377 Жыл бұрын
Demi Moore the ABC soap opera General Hospital, playing the role of an investigative reporter until 1983. do you know General Hospital uses the characters on the show that has aphasia. She was married too. Bruce Willis. Are you seeing where this is going to?
@KevinVanOrd Жыл бұрын
Uhh...
@juniormynos9457 Жыл бұрын
This video makes me wonder if human intelligence is the product of language
@sunny_muffins Жыл бұрын
Nice nail color 💅🏻
@ericreativecuts Жыл бұрын
I have fibromyalgia and when my pain is high I can't remember how to say words. It's incredibly frustrating. I guess it's like a temporary Broca's aphasia. What's up with that?
@LeonardGr Жыл бұрын
I was born with dysphasia and I don't know what's the difference between that and aphasia?
@CAMSLAYER139 ай бұрын
They are essentially the same thing
@geoffchurchill54928 ай бұрын
I wonder how this relates to second language learners as we store our mother tongue in the long term memory and use it in the pre-frontal cortex
@bobbyvee9950 Жыл бұрын
The brain is amazing. I wish I had one.
@dybiosol6 ай бұрын
Brain so complex that the brain is trying to understand what's going on with itself. We are doing a meta level of introspection at this point.
@Brownyman Жыл бұрын
You ladies should do a video about Genie Wiley.
@MyysticYT3 ай бұрын
Cool new sentence?
@TheCrankyDank Жыл бұрын
I wonder if things like lion's mane and other fungi said to repair and form new neural pathways would be helpful in treating this. Is anyone doing trials on this?
@wendychavez5348 Жыл бұрын
That's a question worth exploring! My mom retired from a research clinic a few years ago, and is still remembered fondly there, so I might be able to get some answers in a few days.
@TheCrankyDank Жыл бұрын
@@wendychavez5348 I'd love to read anything you come back with!
@varoonnone71599 ай бұрын
How old is Dr Tan ? 16 ? He looks so young
@editflores10 ай бұрын
I'm trying to learn more and more about this if anyone has a video with a lot of trauma to the head connected to this please send it.
@tigertiger1699 Жыл бұрын
I imagine is fundamental with anthropology
@LifeEleanorDeathNell Жыл бұрын
Can you get long-lasting aphasia from severe sleep chronic sleep deprivation and/or stress/other areas of poor physical healthcare? I didn't have any particular issues with language that I'm aware of when I was younger, but in the last part of my last year of high school I was incredibly stressed and depressed, had no idea how to eat well, didn't exercise, barely slept, and I developed several issues, some of which went away when I started being healthier and some of which got better but never went away. One of those latter effects is that I struggle a lot to remember words, especially nouns. It results is a noticeably stilted speech pattern. My mum has commented on it, that she noticed I was struggling with language all of a sudden in the last weeks of high school, and that I never fully went back to how fluidly I spoke before. Since then I've had other periods of prolonged significant stress and lack of sleep, and I have developed other issues during those periods. Again, some go away once I get enough sleep, some sick around. One of the things I developed (as far as I know it wasn't present when I was younger) is an audio processing disorder. Do these things count as aphasia? I'm very curious to know more.
@allengreg54473 ай бұрын
Brain damage and other modern marvels have proved that the pancreas is not responsible for human language, as many scientists once thought.
@christianchauhan23 Жыл бұрын
❤🤍💙 all your videos mam👍
@GaasubaMeskhenet Жыл бұрын
How do people with different kinds of aphasia handle sign language??
@GaasubaMeskhenet Жыл бұрын
I'm so incredibly surprised this wasn't already in the video
@GaasubaMeskhenet Жыл бұрын
I forgot about singing. And how is writing affected?
@pbsstoried Жыл бұрын
Pretty much the same, it turns out. The modality of language, whether signed or spoken (or even written) is similarly affected by damage to the left hemisphere. Sign languages really illustrate how aphasia truly is a language impairment, not just affecting verbal communication or speech sounds! - Dr. B PS: Part of my answer here is taken from a paragraph spelling this out in the script, but it looks like that didn't make it to the final cut!
@auruum Жыл бұрын
so, in *other words*, the brain is really important for language.
@Lunar994 Жыл бұрын
Oh frick, I didn't know Bruce's condition was the result of dementia. Wonder how long he has left.