| Literature DB >> 22110314 |
Abstract
This study aimed to verify the existence of a double first language (L1)/second language (L2) dissociation. In recent work, I described a case study of a Arabic-Hebrew aphasic patient (MH) with disturbances in the two languages, with Hebrew (L2) being more impaired. In this case, an Arabic-Hebrew bilingual patient (MM) with a similar cultural background who suffered brain damage following a left hemisphere tumor (oligodendroglioma) and craniotomy is reported. The same materials were used, which overcame methodological constraints in our previous work. The results revealed a complementary pattern of severe impairment of L1 (Arabic), while MM had mild language disorder in L2 (Hebrew) with intact semantic knowledge in both languages. These two cases demonstrate a double L1/L2 dissociation in unique languages, and support the notion that bilingual persons could have distinct cortical language areas.Entities:
Keywords: aphasia; arabic; bilingual; brain damage; dissociation; double-dissociation; hebrew; localization
Year: 2008 PMID: 22110314 PMCID: PMC3218755 DOI: 10.2147/prbm.s4125
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Res Behav Manag ISSN: 1179-1578