LEXICAL AGRAPHIA IN THE JAPANESE LANGUAGE

Dyslexia, Acquired Male Brain Diseases Language Tests Writing 05 social sciences Middle Aged Temporal Lobe 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Japan Humans Female 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences Tomography, X-Ray Computed Agraphia Aged Language
DOI: 10.1093/brain/112.6.1549 Publication Date: 2007-01-04T09:37:03Z
ABSTRACT
A new syndrome of 'pure agraphia for Kanji' is described in 3 Japanese subjects with lesions in the left posteroinferior temporal region. Kanji (ideogram or morphogram) can be compared with orthographically irregular or ambiguous words in some European languages, since it is impossible to write Kanji characters unless each one of them is learned and memorized. In contrast, Kana (phonogram or syllabogram) words are comparable with orthographically regular words or nonsense words, because the Kana writing system depends on strict phonological rules (almost one-to-one correspondence between syllable and syllabogram). We conclude that 'lexical agraphia' reported in European languages can also be observed in the Japanese language where it is expressed as 'pure agraphia for Kanji'. 'Lexical agraphia' is a useful concept with general application regardless of language system.
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