Aphasia, apraxia and the evolution of the language‐ready brain

Author: Arbib, Michael1

Source: Aphasiology, Volume 20, Numbers 9-11, -11/September/October/November 2006 , pp. 1125-1155(31)

Publisher: Psychology Press, part of the Taylor & Francis Group

Abstract:

Background : The Mirror System Hypothesis offers the mirror system for grasping (i.e., neural mechanisms active for both execution and observation of grasping) as a neural “missing link” between the brains of our non‐human ancestors of 20 million years ago and the modern human language‐ready brain, stressing the importance of manual gesture in the evolution of mechanisms supporting language. Aims : To assess the view that neural mechanisms for both praxis and language share an evolutionary relationship to the ancestral mirror system for grasping. Main Contribution : The praxis system receives a new analysis based on the attempt to link human praxis to computational models of execution and observation of grasping in the macaque as well as the analysis of parallels between language and praxis. Conclusions : The conceptual analysis presented here may prove insightful for clinicians seeking to relate and differentiate aphasia and apraxia.

Document Type: Research article

DOI: 10.1080/02687030600741683

Affiliations: 1: University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA

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