Medicina: Neuropsicologia cognitiva
English |
verbal stereotypy |
|
|
Attestation |
3
|
Part of speech |
Noun phrase
|
Definition |
A production error consisting of a series of syllables the patient utters without variations sometimes with a normal prosody. A production error consisting of a series of nonsense syllables, that is a consonant-vowel-consonant sequence (e.g. cag), a neologism (e.g. galdop), and one or two significant words (e.g. oh my God) the patient repeats without variations, anytime he wants to say something.
|
Definition source |
Vista-Mead 2001 Vista-Mead 2001
|
Context |
These primitive expressions have interested some aphasiologists ever since Hughiings Jackson (1874, 1879) fìrst wrote extensively about them, and a number of terms have been used to describe them. In fact there is still little agreement, on the terms used to describe and distinguish between these utterances. Jackson (1874) himself called them ’recurrent utterances’ and ’recurring utterances’, while ’verbal stereotypy’ (Alajouanine 1956; Lebrun 1986), ’speech automatism’ (Huber et al. 1982) and ’neologistic automatisms’ (Haas et al. 1988) are also in current use.
|
Context source |
Code 1989
|
Subject field |
Aphasia
|
Sub-field (level 1) |
Aphasiology
|
Sub-field (level 2) |
Cognitive neuropsychology
|
Sub-field (level 3) |
Lexical deficits
|
Related concept |
Neologism, Insertion, Omission, Substitution error, Transposition error, Conduite d’approche
|
it |
Stereotipia sillabica
|
Reliability code |
3
|
|