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Research that manipulates factors to determine the cause and effect |
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Research in which the relationship betwen variables is studied without experimental manipulation of the independant variables |
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Anything that can vary
Any factor in a study that you seek to measure
Gender
Shoe size |
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A factor manipulated by the experimenter
The effect of the independent variable is the
focus of the study |
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The factor in the experiment not manipulated by the experimenter |
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Research design that examines the extent to which the variables are associated without manipulation |
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Benefits of Correlational Research |
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Less expensive
Good starting point for experimental research
Can look at problems that are unethical to manipulate
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Experimental design that permits cause and effect inferences |
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Experiment Consists of.... |
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Random assignment of participants to conditions
Manipulation of and independent variable
Both are necessary; If a study does not contain both it is not an experiment |
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Cofounding Variable
(Third Variable Problem) |
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A hidden variable whose presence affects the variables being studied so that the results you get do not reflect the actual relationship between the variables under investigation |
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An electrically excitable cell that processes and transmits information throughout the body |
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Number of Neurons in the Human Brain |
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Number of connections a neuron can have with other neurons have |
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The signal between Neurons can move up to |
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Neurons in bunches make up |
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consist of bunches of neurons that respond stimuli in the environment
Involved in all senses |
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A neural impulse. A brief electrical charge that travels down the axon to the terminal branches. Is generated by the movement of positively charged atoms in and out of the channels in the axon membrane. |
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Branching extensions at the cell body. Receive messages from other cells. |
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Branched endings of an axon that transmit messages to other neurons.
Forms junctions with other cells |
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A space between the axon tip of the sending
neuron and the dendrite or cell body of the receiving neuron.
This tiny gap is called the Synaptic Cleft During a synapse the neurons never actually touch there is always a gap. |
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A layer of fatty tissues encasing the fibers of many neurons; enables faster transmission speed of impulses
Covers the axon of some neurons and helps speed neural impulses |
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Life support center of the neuron |
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An action potential stays the same throught the
legth of the axon
Once the neuron fires the speed of action
potential stays the same |
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Parasympathetic Nervous System
(PNS) |
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Calming system
Conserves energy and lowers your level of arousal |
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Sympathetic Nervous System
SNS |
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Arousing system
Responds to heightened states of arousal
Fight of Flight |
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The Brain and Spinal Chord |
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Peripheral Nervous System
(PNS) |
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Sensory and motor neurons that connect the CNS to the rest of the body
Includes the Autonomic System |
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Controls involuntary processes such as heartbeat, digestion etc. |
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Processes memory and emotional processes
Contains:
Hypothalamus
Hippocampus
Amygdala |
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Chemicals that determine if the neuron fires or not
Either an increase or decrease in neurotransmitters will fire the neuron |
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Properties of Action Potential |
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Either the neuron fires or it doesn't
A strong stimulus can trigger more neurons to fire more often, but does not affect the action potentials strength or speed |
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An area of injury or disease within the brain |
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The distribution center for the brain.
Receives and relays importan neural information from areas of lower complexity
Optic nerves connect to the thalamus and the thalamus connects to the visual cortex |
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Connects the Left and Right hemispheres of the Brain |
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Important in the regulation of the Autonomic Nervous System
Maintains Equilibrium
The 3 F's
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Fear and emotional memory |
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Stores and retrieves declarative memories
Differentiates between declarative memories and procedural memories
Moves memories from STM to LTM |
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A person with out a hippocampus..... |
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Cannot Convert STM to LTM |
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Coordinates/Fine tunes
Motor movement
Important in Learning/Conditioning and priming |
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Controls heartbeat and breathing
Located in the Hindbrain |
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EEG
Electroencephalograph |
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Recording of the brain's electrical activity at the surface of the skull |
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Observes blood flowi in the brain
More blood flow is concentrated in the parts of the brain active during specific tasks
Used in most brain research, especially somatosensory cortex researchers |
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MRI
Magnetic Resonance Imaging |
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Uses magnetic fields to indirectly visualize brain structure |
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PET
Positron Emission Topography |
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Determins which area of the brain are specific for certain tasks
Person swallows radioactive Glucose |
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A cognitive function that relies more on one side of the brain than the other |
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region of the cerebral cortex involved in the planning, control, and execution of voluntary movements
If you stimulate the motor cortex with an electrode then that corresponding part of the body would move |
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Cortex that deals with senses/sensations
If you stimulate sensory cortex you would feel a sensation in the corresponding body part |
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If you separate the hindbrain from the rest of the brain |
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The individual would do virtually nothing but
Breathe |
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Is it true that specific areas of the brain perform specific functions? |
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No functions are dictated by our entire brain |
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SSRI
Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor |
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Inhibits the intake of serotonin neurotransmitters by blocking the receptors |
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The amount of energy needed to for the neuron to fire
Each neuron must reach a minimum intensity in ourder to fire
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Does the size of the brain matter? |
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Brain size does matter to a certain extent
The size of the brain does not always determine the intelligence of an animal |
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The first part of the brain to develop and is most primitive |
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Visual Processing
*Reading
*Vision |
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Spatial awareness and abilities
*Sense youch and appreciation of form through touch
*Sensry combination and comprehension
*Spatial manipulation of objects or maps |
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Memory, emotion and language
Functions
Some hearing, language, and speech
Some behavior and emotions
Memory
Fear
Recognizing objects |
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Planning and inhibition
Functions
Abstract tought
Problem solving
Attention
Creative thought
Reflection
Coordination of movement |
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Parasympathetic System Contains |
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Autonomic System
Autonomic System Includes
Sympathetic System
Parasympathetic System |
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Linear thinking mode, sees images as a whole
Right Hand Control
Writing
Scientific Skills
Math
Lists
Logic
Speech |
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Hollistic Thinking
Left hand control
Emotional expression
Spatial awareness
music, creativity, imagination
Dimension
Analytic- Details of an image/what makes up the image |
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Victims of A stroke have problems with what side of their body |
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Issues occur on the opposing side of the the body.
Example
Stoke on left side of brain= Issues on Right side
Stroke on Right side of brain= Issues on Left side |
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If the corpus callosum was severed |
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Hands could work independently
Each hand does only what its half of the brain sees
The two halves of the brain do not communicate |
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Right Hemisphere completely removed
Degenerative brain disorder
Loss of complete control of her left side
Right hemisphere fills up with spinal fluid
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Cerebral Cortex makes up what percent of our brain? |
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Compensates for the loss of a brain area |
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Explicit Memory
The process of recalling information intentionally |
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Implicit Memory
Memory for motor skills and habits
Is used when we
Ride a bike or Open a soda |
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Detecting physical energy in the environment and encoding it as neural signals |
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Processing of information done by the brain
Brains interpretation of raw sensry inputs
Using previous knowledge to gather and interpret stimuli registered by our senses |
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Filters, organizes and interprets raw data
Brain is at the top of our bodies and it's influence reached down to affect incoming stimulus energies
Sense Driven
Starts with our expectations
Associated with perception, items or event to which we deliberatly direct our attention
Emphasizes how a persons concept and mental proccesses influence object recognition |
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Starts with sensory receptors
Associated with sensation, Items that grab our attention
Thought Driven
Emphasizes the importance of stimulus in object recognition (What our sensory receptors actually register)
*Environment: Stimuli registered on our sensory receptors; Lines, angels, shapes, colors, sounds, smells etc.
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Minimum stimulation required to trigger a neural impulse
Minimum stimulation necessary to detect a stimulus 50% of the time
We can sense below absolute threshold, but less than 50% of the time |
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Stimulation below the absolute threshold for conscious awareness
"Sex" spelled out in the stars in Lion King
Subliminal stimuli has a subtle, fleeting effect
Priming and pleasantnes
Familiarity/recognition
Do NOT have powerful enduring effects |
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Difference Threshold
(JND) |
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Minimum difference a person can detect between two stimuli
Just noticeable difference
The magnitude of stimulus Increases |
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Two stimuli must differ by a constant minimum percentage (rather than a constant amount), to be perceived as different.
Light: 8%
Weight: 2%
Tone: 0.3% |
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Diminishing sensitivity as a consequence of constant stimulation.
After constant exposure, nerve cells fire less
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Example of Sensory Adaptation |
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Place smelled smoky when I got in, but then I got used to it |
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Our body's ability to convert one type of energy to another
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Our eyes receive light energy and converts it into neural messages to the brain, so we can process it into what we consciously see |
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Where light enters the eye
protects the eye and bends the light to focus it |
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Small adjustable opening light passes through |
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Colored muscle around pupil
Regulates light getting in, affected by light intensity and emotions |
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Focuses light rays into an image on the back of the surface of the eye
Does this by changing it curvature or shape
(Process called accommodation) |
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Light-sensitive inner surface of the eye, where the light is focused
Originally brings image in upside down, but brain receives it right side up
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Central/focal point of the retina |
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Optic Nerve
Carries neural impulses from the eye to the brain (occipital lobe) |
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Definition
Carries neural impulses from the eye to the brain
(occipital lobe)
Where the optic nerve leaves the eye, there are no receptorcess this is your blind spot |
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Receptor cells associated with black and white vision
Located at the periphery of the retina
More sensitive in dim light; picks our contrast
(Can't see colors well)
In dim light, pupil dilates to let more light reach the rods in the retina |
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Receptor cells associated with color vision
Better at detecting detail
Carries visual information into the optic nerve
Located at the fovea of the retina |
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Nerve cells in the brain respond to the specific features of a stimulus
Edges
Shapes
Angles
Movements
Different areas of your brain respond to different items |
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Processing of several aspects of the stimulus simultaneously
The brain divides a visual scene into subdivision such as color, depth, form, movement etc. |
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Trichromatic theory (Young and Hemholtz) |
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Our eyes have three types of color receptors, one for each primary colory
Can create any color by combining the three primary colors, Red, Green, Blue.
Ex. Yellow comes from stimulating both red and green sensitive cones |
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Opponent-processes theory (Hering) |
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We have two additional color processes
One responsible for red vs. green
One responsible for blue vs. yellow
After leaving your receptor cells, visual information is analyzed in terms of the opponents colors
Explains after images ]
Example: Stare at green and look away and see red |
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People who are color blind from the lack of functioning red or green sensitive cones, making it impossible to distinguish red from green |
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Gate Control Theory
(Melzack and Wall) |
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Proposed that our spinal cord contains neurological "gates" that eith block pain or allow it to be sensed
Large Fiber tract is for your sensory signals
Small fibers are a separate channel for pain
The tracts decide what is sent to the brain
We receive projections from the sensory path way
*Individuals born without the ability to feel pain often die by early childhood |
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The Gate Control Theory
Exceptional Cases of Pain |
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Ringing with hearing loss
Phantom limb sensations
Virtual reality pain control |
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Sensation of lingering pain in a limb that is no longer there
Pain may last months or years after loss
More frequent because of increased war survivors
Up to 70% suffer
May be some relief through theraputic efforts
Amputation changes the brains motor map |
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The body's sense of itself
Allows the person to coordinate movement without attending to it |
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Difference between sensation and perception |
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Perception is an integration of what is actually out there and top down processing
Sensation sensory information is what is being integrated |
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Benefit of Sensory Adaptation |
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Reduced sensitivity to constant sensory information frees us to focus on informative changes in our environment
We don't need to be constantly reminded that your wearing a watch, glasses or clothing |
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The smallest distinctive sound unit
40 in the English language, 869 in all |
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The smalles unit that carries meaning
Prefixes and suffixes |
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A morpheme that comes at the beginning or end of a work
Suffix or Prefix |
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A system of rules that allows us to communicate with each ohter
Includes semantics and syntax |
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Critical period of Language |
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From birth until about seven |
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Skinnerian view of language |
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Children learn language by reinforcement principles
(Operant Conditioning)
Issue: Children make utternces that are not taught by parents (I hate mommy) |
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Chomsky's View of Language |
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Children have innate capacity to learn language and through experience this capacity is exploited. |
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Non-Fluent aphasia in which the ability to speak and write is impared, due to a lesion in the inula and surrounding operculum |
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Inability to understand written, spoken or tactile speech symbols due to disease of the auditory and visual word centers |
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View that all thought is represented verbally and as a result our language defines our thinking |
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