Title of article :
Arnoldus Van Rhijn on aphasia: A forgotten thesis
Author/Authors :
Eling، نويسنده , , Paul، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages :
14
From page :
885
To page :
898
Abstract :
Background a formed a central topic in the discussion on localization of function in the nineteenth century, in particular in France, Germany and Great Brittain. Little is known on contributions from the Netherlands. aper aims to discuss the contents of Arnoldus Van Rhijn’s dissertation on aphasia, written in 1868 and one of the very few Dutch contributions to aphasiology in the nineteenth century. Added to this paper is a translation of the “Physiological Part” of Van Rhijn’s dissertation. e ijn discussed three cases with acquired aphasia. He rejected Broca’s notion of a cortical center for the articulation of speech and instead regarded the cortex as the site where the will exerted its influence. He argued that there is a certain form of specialization: the will to say something is localized at a different place than the will to write. According to Van Rhijn, the highest motor centers are localized in the subcortical gray areas. Van Rhijn concluded that aphasia may result from lesions to the cortical centers involved in speaking, or from a disconnection of the cortical and subcortical centers. sion ittle work was done on aphasia in the 19th century in the Netherlands. Van Rhijn’s thesis, from an aphasiological point of view of limited value, does show that the notions of “centers”, “connections”, and “disorders due to disconnections” were generally known before Wernicke, also in the Netherlands.
Keywords :
Aphasia , the Netherlands , localization , Connectionism , Wernicke
Journal title :
Cortex
Serial Year :
2011
Journal title :
Cortex
Record number :
2300753
Link To Document :
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