By studying stroke victims who have lost
the ability to spell, researchers have pinpointed the parts of the brain that
control how we write words.
"When something
goes wrong with spelling, it's not one thing that always happens—different
things can happen and they come from different breakdowns in the brain's
machinery," said lead author Brenda Rapp, a professor in the Department of
Cognitive Sciences. "Depending on what part breaks, you'll have different
symptoms."In the latest issue of the journal Brain, Johns
Hopkins University neuroscientists link basic spelling difficulties for the
first time with damage to seemingly unrelated regions of the brain, shedding new light
on the mechanics of language and memory.
Rapp's team studied 15
years' worth of cases in which 33 people were left with spelling impairments
after suffering strokes. Some of the people had long-term memory difficulties,
others working-memory issues.
With long-term memory
difficulties, people can't remember how to spell words they once knew and tend
to make educated guesses. They could probably correctly guess a predictably
spelled word like "camp," but with a more unpredictable spelling like
"sauce," they might try "soss." In severe cases, people
trying to spell "lion" might offer things like "lonp,"
"lint" and even "tiger." With working memory issues, people
know how to spell words but they have trouble choosing the correct letters or
assembling the letters in the correct order—"lion" might be
"liot," "lin," "lino," or "liont."
The team used computer
mapping to chart the brain lesions of
each individual and found that in the long-term memory cases, damage appeared
on two areas of the left hemisphere, one
towards the front of the brain and the other at the lower part of the brain
towards the back. In working memory cases, the lesions were primarily also in
the left hemisphere but in a very different area in the upper part of the brain
towards the back.
"I was surprised to
see how distant and distinct the brain regions are that support these two
subcomponents of the writing process, especially two subcomponents that are so
closely inter-related during spelling that some have argued that they shouldn't
be thought of as separate functions," Rapp said. "You might have
thought that they would be closer together and harder to tease apart."
Though science knows
quite a bit about how the brain handles reading, these findings offer some of
the first clear evidence of how it spells, an understanding that could lead to
improved behavioral treatments after brain damage and more effective ways to
teach spelling.
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