Overview
- Analyzes the original works of Broca and Wernicke
- Discusses the influence of the Broca-Wernicke model on everyday decision-making in clinical practice
- Describes historical lesion-deficit studies, animal studies, electrocortical mapping procedures during brain surgery, functional neuroimaging and clinical observations of patients with brain lesions
- Written from a clinical and neurosurgical perspective
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Table of contents (9 chapters)
Keywords
About this book
This book discusses theories that link functions to specific anatomical brain regions. The best known of these are the Broca and Wernicke regions, and these have become synonyms for the location of productive and receptive language functions respectively. This Broca-Wernicke model has proved to be such a powerful concept that is remains the predominant view in modern clinical practice. What is fascinating, however, is that there is little evidence for this strictly localist view on language functions. Modern neuroscience and numerous clinical observations in individual patients show that language functions are represented in complex and ever-changing neural networks. It is fair to say that the model is wrong, and that Broca’s and Wernicke’s areas in their classic forms do not exist.
This is a fascinating paradox: why do neurologists and neurosurgeons continue to use these iconic language models in everyday decision-making? In this book, the author uses his background as a neurosurgeon and a neuroscientist to provide some answers to this question.
The book acquaints clinicians and researchers with the many different aspects of language representation in the brain. It provides a historical overview of functional localisation, as well as insights into the misjudgements that have kept the localist doctrine alive. It creates an awareness of the need to integrate clinical observations and neuroscientific theories if we want to progress further in clinical language research and patient care.
Reviews
“Geert-Jan Rutten’s book The Broca-Wernicke Doctrine offers an extraordinary journey through language localization, symptomatology, and its history. … After reading this book, the reader will have a broad panorama of language in neuroscience … . A must read for each neurosurgeon interested in the field of aphasia and also in localization of brain function.” (Adrien Thomas May and Karl Schaller, Acta Neurochirurgica, Vol. 160 (2), February, 2018)
“Geert-Jan Rutten seeks to clarify historical and current concepts of how brain regions relate to language and other functions. The result is an entertaining and enlightening tour of the history of cerebral neuroscience. … This book is clearly targeted to neurosurgeons and neuroscientists and includes an appropriate level of scientific detail, yet it is consistently engaging and easy to read with logical organization and excellent summaries.” (Jonathan Miller, Neurosurgery, January, 2018)
Authors and Affiliations
About the author
Geert-Jan Rutten works as a neurosurgeon at the St Elisabeth-Tweesteden Hospital in Tilburg (the Netherlands), where he has a special interest in brain tumour surgery and functional brain mapping. He is also involved in research that focuses on the relationship between brain, cognition and behaviour in neurosurgical patients.
Bibliographic Information
Book Title: The Broca-Wernicke Doctrine
Book Subtitle: A Historical and Clinical Perspective on Localization of Language Functions
Authors: Geert-Jan Rutten
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-54633-9
Publisher: Springer Cham
eBook Packages: Medicine, Medicine (R0)
Copyright Information: Springer International Publishing AG 2017
Hardcover ISBN: 978-3-319-54632-2Published: 25 July 2017
Softcover ISBN: 978-3-319-85440-3Published: 12 September 2018
eBook ISBN: 978-3-319-54633-9Published: 04 July 2017
Edition Number: 1
Number of Pages: XVII, 306
Number of Illustrations: 73 b/w illustrations, 38 illustrations in colour
Topics: Neurosurgery, Neurosciences, Neurology, History of Medicine