Abstract
Background: The cerebellum was traditionally considered to be exclusively involved in the coordination of voluntary movement, gait, posture, balance and motor speech. However,
this view was challenged by recent neuroanatomical, neuroimaging and clinical findings, providing preliminary evidence of a cerebellar contribution to linguistic functioning.
Aim: To discuss the role of the cerebellum in a variety of linguistic functions and to explore the underlying mechanisms. Methods: A literature search was conducted via electronic databases. Exclusion criteria were: disorders following congenital cerebellar lesions, motor speech disorders, cognitive deficits outside the language sphere, neuropsychiatric disorders and insufficient information on the cerebellar role in language. Abstracts were not included. In addition,
only adult subjects were taken into consideration. Results: A variety of linguistic disorders were found to occur following acquired cerebellar lesions: (1) impaired phonological and semantic fluency; (2) agrammatism (at morphological and sentence level); (3) naming and word finding difficulties; (4) cerebellar-induced aphasia; (5) reading difficulties; (6) writing problems, and (7) higher-level language deficits, including
disturbed listening comprehension, impaired language proficiency and metalinguistic ability. Several hypotheses have been suggested to explain the nature of the cerebellar contribution to language. However, findings are not univocal. Conclusion: The cerebellum appears to be involved in a variety of linguistic functions. However, the precise nature of this contribution is not clear yet. Linguistic, neuroimaging, neuroanatomical and neuropsychological studies should be combined in order to disentangle the specific
contribution of the cerebellum to linguistic processing.
this view was challenged by recent neuroanatomical, neuroimaging and clinical findings, providing preliminary evidence of a cerebellar contribution to linguistic functioning.
Aim: To discuss the role of the cerebellum in a variety of linguistic functions and to explore the underlying mechanisms. Methods: A literature search was conducted via electronic databases. Exclusion criteria were: disorders following congenital cerebellar lesions, motor speech disorders, cognitive deficits outside the language sphere, neuropsychiatric disorders and insufficient information on the cerebellar role in language. Abstracts were not included. In addition,
only adult subjects were taken into consideration. Results: A variety of linguistic disorders were found to occur following acquired cerebellar lesions: (1) impaired phonological and semantic fluency; (2) agrammatism (at morphological and sentence level); (3) naming and word finding difficulties; (4) cerebellar-induced aphasia; (5) reading difficulties; (6) writing problems, and (7) higher-level language deficits, including
disturbed listening comprehension, impaired language proficiency and metalinguistic ability. Several hypotheses have been suggested to explain the nature of the cerebellar contribution to language. However, findings are not univocal. Conclusion: The cerebellum appears to be involved in a variety of linguistic functions. However, the precise nature of this contribution is not clear yet. Linguistic, neuroimaging, neuroanatomical and neuropsychological studies should be combined in order to disentangle the specific
contribution of the cerebellum to linguistic processing.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Title of host publication | Programme and Abstract Book 27th World Congress of the International Association of Logopedics and Phoniatrics |
| Publisher | http://www.ialp2007.ics.dk/IALP_ICS.pdf |
| Pages | 48-48 |
| Number of pages | 1 |
| Publication status | Published - 2007 |
| Event | Finds and Results from the Swedish Cyprus Expedition: A Gender Perspective at the Medelhavsmuseet - Stockholm, Sweden Duration: 21 Sept 2009 → 25 Sept 2009 |
Conference
| Conference | Finds and Results from the Swedish Cyprus Expedition: A Gender Perspective at the Medelhavsmuseet |
|---|---|
| Country/Territory | Sweden |
| City | Stockholm |
| Period | 21/09/09 → 25/09/09 |
Keywords
- cerebellum
- language
- linguistic processing
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'The cerebellum and language: the story so far'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 1 Finished
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FWOAL324: Cerebellaire neurocognitie : een neuropsychologische en neurolinguistische investigatie van cognitieve dysfuncties na cerebellaire letsels bij kinderen en adolescenten.
Marien, P. (Administrative Promotor) & Paquier, P. (Co-Promotor)
1/01/05 → 31/12/08
Project: Fundamental
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