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Test Bank
to accompany
Language in Mind: An Introduction to Psycholinguistics, Second Edition
Julie Sedivy
Chapter 3: Language and the Brain
Multiple Choice
1. A neurolinguist would most likely study
a. the physical organization of the cerebral cortex, including fissures, grooves and the vessels
that transport blood and nutrients throughout this system.
b. how a lesion in Wernickeโs area might affect language production.
c. the effects of dopamine on depression.
d. the effects of moving to a new school on childrenโs self esteem.
Answer: b
Textbook Reference: Intro
Bloomโs Level: 3. Applying
2. Which of the following sentences would you expect a patient with Brocaโs aphasia to have the
most difficulty understanding?
a. The dog bit the man.
b. The sorbet that the lady is eating is sour.
c. The girl who the boy is pushing is big.
d. The mail carrier who the dog bit called the police.
Answer: c
Textbook Reference: 3.1 Evidence from Damage to the Brain
Bloomโs Level: 5. Evaluating
3. The cerebral cortex is
a. smooth with little or no convolutions.
b. the outermost layer of neurons covering the brain.
c. only used 10% of the time.
d. only found in humans.
Answer: b
Textbook Reference: 3.1 Evidence from Damage to the Brain
Bloomโs Level: 1. Remembering
4. Scientists in Phineas Gageโs time
a. knew a great deal about how the brain is organized and which cerebral areas are responsible
for which cognitive abilities.
b. were just beginning to decipher the relationship between the physical components of the brain
and their relationship to human behavior.
c. used sophisticated methodologies and techniques to indentify how the physical brain relates to
human behavior.
d. had little interest in understanding the relationship between neural components and behavior.
ยฉ 2019 Oxford University Press
Answer: b
Textbook Reference: 3.1 Evidence from Damage to the Brain
Bloomโs Level: 4. Analyzing
5. Studies such as those published by Nina Dronkers and her colleagues (2004) indicate that
language functioning
a. is contained within specific, independent brain โorgans.โ
b. is affected in similar ways regardless of where in the brain damage occurs.
c. is distributed across several different brain regions.
d. can be restored even in cases of severe brain injury.
Answer: c
Textbook Reference: 3.1 Evidence from Damage to the Brain
Bloomโs Level: 1. Remembering
6. Voxel-based lesion-symptom mapping (VLSM) is most useful because it allows researchers to
a. precisely correlate diminished performance with damage to specific parts of the brain.
b. study the impact of brain lateralization.
c. identify and define Brodmann areas.
d. assess language comprehension in aphasic patients.
Answer: a
Textbook Reference: 3.1 Evidence from Damage to the Brain
Bloomโs Level: 1. Remembering
7. Brocaโs aphasia is characterized by a patientโs inability to
a. understand spoken language.
b. understand written text.
c. speak fluently.
d. understand the function of objects in their environment.
Answer: c
Textbook Reference: 3.1 Evidence from Damage to the Brain
Bloomโs Level: 1. Remembering
8. Which would you expect to be especially difficult for a patient with Brocaโs aphasia?
a. Understanding a political candidate’s speech
b. Delivering a speech without pauses or hesitations
c. Getting the gist of an audiobook
d. Following a movie that has a great deal of dialogue
Answer: b
Textbook Reference: 3.1 Evidence from Damage to the Brain
Bloomโs Level: 2. Understanding
9. A person with Wernickeโs aphasia will demonstrate
a. halting speech.
b. inability to produce speech.
c. nonsensical speech.
d. normal ability to comprehend speech.
Answer: c
Textbook Reference: 3.1 Evidence from Damage to the Brain
Bloomโs Level: 2. Understanding
ยฉ 2019 Oxford University Press
10. A physician asks four patients with aphasia to describe how to make a peanut butter
sandwich. Which response most likely came from a patient with Wernickeโs aphasia?
a. โSure, no problem. Open the jar and, uh, uh, uh โฆ peanut, oops, no, no knife โฆspread and, uh
โฆ bread โฆ sprea-ding โฆ jeeelly โฆ wait โฆโ
b. โIโd put a glob of peanut butter from the jar onto a knife, spread it onto one piece of bread, put
some jelly on another slice of bread, spread that, and then put the two pieces of bread together.โ
c. โMe like peanuts. Me spread. Jelly on bread. Put together. Me eat.โ
d. โObviously Iโd think itโs utzkin, though certainly I do want to go when itโs vehubative. I
would recommend placing a spoon in the bowl. I do wobble and frink.โ
Answer: d
Textbook Reference: 3.1 Evidence from Damage to the Brain
Bloomโs Level: 2. Understanding
11. A surgeon conducting an autopsy on a patient who had suffered from Brocaโs aphasia would
most likely find damage in the
a. corpus callosum.
b. right frontal lobe.
c. left occipital lobe.
d. left frontal lobe.
Answer: d
Textbook Reference: 3.1 Evidence from Damage to the Brain
Bloomโs Level: 1. Remembering
12. Wilder Penfieldโs research on the localization of function in the brain demonstrated that
when Brocaโs area is stimulated in a conscious person,
a. the effect is always the same; namely that the ability to understand language is disrupted.
b. the effect is always the same; namely that the ability to produce language is disrupted.
c. although the effect may be varied, depending on the individual being stimulated, it will likely
be related to linguistic abilities.
d. although the effect may be varied, depending on the individual being stimulated, it will likely
be related to non-linguistic abilities.
Answer: c
Textbook Reference: 3.1 Evidence from Damage to the Brain
Bloomโs Level: 1. Remembering
13. You are examining a split-brain patient. After flashing a picture of a bird in the patientโs left
visual field, which response are you likely to get?
a. The patient says โbirdโ but is unable to chirp.
b. The patient says โbirdโ and points to a bird with the left hand.
c. The patient points to a bird with the right hand but is unable to say โbird.โ
d. The patient points to a bird with the left hand but is unable to say โbird.โ
Answer: d
Textbook Reference: 3.1 Evidence from Damage to the Brain
Bloomโs Level: 4. Analyzing
14. A(n) _______ is evident if one patient exhibits a language impairment with normal
mathematical abilities and another patient exhibits a mathematical impairment with normal
language.
a. hemodynamic change
ยฉ 2019 Oxford University Press
b. localization
c. double dissociation
d. action potential
Answer: c
Textbook Reference: 3.2 Mapping the Healthy Human Brain
Bloomโs Level: 1. Remembering
15. When designing an fMRI study, which would be the best strategy for isolating the neural
activity associated with the vocal component of reading a word from other potential actions
related to reading?
a. Compare fMRI scans of a subject silently reading a word and of reading the word aloud.
b. Compare fMRI scans of a subject looking at a picture that is related to a word and of reading
the word aloud.
c. Compare a PET scan of a subject reading a word aloud to an fMRI scan of a subject reading
the same word aloud.
d. Perform an fMRI scan of the participant as he is talking to a friend, noting the level of brain
activity when he uses the target word.
Answer: a
Textbook Reference: 3.2 Mapping the Healthy Human Brain
Bloomโs Level: 5. Evaluating
16. In a 2004 fMRI study of word reading, Olaf Hauk and his colleagues demonstrated that
language-specific brain regions
a. are the only regions responsible for interpreting and producing spoken language.
b. are not the only areas activated by certain categories of words related to physical acts, such as
kicking, stepping, or walking.
c. are highly localized and respond primarily to written language.
d. rarely interact with regions responsible for action or movement.
Answer: b
Textbook Reference: 3.2 Mapping the Healthy Human Brain
Bloomโs Level: 1. Remembering
17. Wernicke believed that language processing was
a. highly compartmentalized in the brain, with specific modules communicating in pre-set
patterns.
b. distributed throughout the brain in a highly coordinated network.
c. localized in one specific brain area.
d. strictly contained in the left hemisphere.
Answer: b
Textbook Reference: 3.2 Mapping the Healthy Human Brain
Bloomโs Level: 2. Understanding
18. While the dorsal stream is responsible for โ_______โ information, the ventral stream
provides us with a path for knowledge about โ_______โ information.
a. where; how
b. how; what
c. who; what
d. what; how
Answer: b
ยฉ 2019 Oxford University Press
Textbook Reference: 3.2 Mapping the Healthy Human Brain
Bloomโs Level: 1. Remembering
19. During a visit to a coffee shop, a patient who has a lesion along the dorsal stream of
information processing would have the most trouble
a. identifying liquid in a mug as coffee.
b. understanding the items on the menu.
c. reaching for his coffee without knocking it over.
d. remembering the name of the server.
Answer: c
Textbook Reference: 3.2 Mapping the Healthy Human Brain
Bloomโs Level: 3. Applying
20. Which of the following is an example of procedural memory?
a. Recalling the author of a favorite poem
b. Remembering the contents of a painting
c. Remembering how to ski
d. Recalling a zip code
Answer: c
Textbook Reference: 3.2 Mapping the Healthy Human Brain
Bloomโs Level: 2. Understanding
21. In terms of memory systems, declarative recall is to _______ as procedural recall is to
_______.
a. remembering the date of your motherโs birthday; flipping pancakes
b. flipping pancakes; remembering your zip code
c. remembering your zip code; remembering your phone number
d. riding a skateboard; flipping pancakes
Answer: a
Textbook Reference: 3.2 Mapping the Healthy Human Brain
Bloomโs Level: 3. Applying
22. A deaf ASL signer suffering from Brocaโs aphasia would
a. have a difficult time mimicking and lip reading what a hearing person was trying to convey.
b. have a difficult time understanding what other signers are signing in ASL.
c. have difficulty interpreting pantomime signs produced by hearing individuals.
d. have a difficult time generating ASL signs they once knew well.
Answer: d
Textbook Reference: 3.2 Mapping the Healthy Human Brain
Bloomโs Level: 2. Understanding
23. A nineteenth century phrenologist would most likely be found
a. using psychoanalytic techniques to investigate a clientโs personality characteristics.
b. describing a clientโs psychological traits based on the physical attributes on a clientโs skull.
c. conducting neural surgery to help patients with physical brain trauma.
d. mapping brain regions using patients with brain trauma.
Answer: b
Textbook Reference: 3.2 Mapping the Healthy Human Brain
Bloomโs Level: 3. Applying
ยฉ 2019 Oxford University Press
24. fMRI scans would find that English and Mandarin speakers
a. both process tone information in the right hemisphere.
b. both process tone information in the left hemispheres.
c. process tone information differentially, with Mandarin speakers showing activation in the
language areas for tones and English speakers showing activation in non-linguistic, sound
processing regions.
d. process tone information differentially, with English speakers showing activation in the
language areas for tones and Mandarin speakers showing activation in non-linguistic, sound
processing regions.
Answer: c
Textbook Reference: 3.2 Mapping the Healthy Human Brain
Bloomโs Level: 4. Analyzing
25. Information flows through a neuron from
a. synapse to cell body to dendrites to axon.
b. dendrites to cell body to axon to synapse.
c. cell body to dendrites to synapse to axon.
d. axon to cell body to synapse to dendrites.
Answer: b
Textbook Reference: 3.3 The Brain in Real-Time Action
Bloomโs Level: 1. Remembering
26. Refer to figures A and B.
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What is the main benefit of using the technique represented in image B over the technique
represented in image A?
a. fMRI scans can be conducted on live participants whereas ERPs are dangerous for live
participant research.
b. ERPs provide a more precise position for activation of linguistic processing areas in the brain
than do fMRI scans.
c. fMRI scans provide more precise representations of the latency of language activation than do
ERP measures.
d. ERPs provide real-time information about the time course of language whereas fMRI data lag
by a few seconds in demonstrating activity sequences.
Answer: d
Textbook Reference: 3.3 The Brain in Real-Time Action
Bloomโs Level: 5. Evaluating
27. Imagine you are conducting an ERP study. You would expect to see an N400 waveform
produced as a result of the italicized stimulus word in this sentence:
a. โI like to eat toast.โ
b. โToast is what I like to jump.โ
c. โI will jumped on the trampoline.โ
d. โStephanie likes to eat ripe umbrellas.โ
Answer: d
Textbook Reference: 3.3 The Brain in Real-Time Action
Bloomโs Level: 3. Applying
28. Imagine you are conducting an ERP study. You would expect to see a P600 waveform as a
result of the italicized stimulus word in this sentence:
a. โI will jump on the trampoline.โ
ยฉ 2019 Oxford University Press
b. โStephanie likes to eat unripe umbrellas.โ
c. โStephanie likes to eat ripe umbrellas.โ
d. โI will jumped on the trampoline.โ
Answer: d
Textbook Reference: 3.3 The Brain in Real-Time Action
Bloomโs Level: 3. Applying
29. You are a physician working with patients who have been diagnosed as being in a vegetative
state. If you present these patients with various types of auditory stimuli, you would likely find
that
a. none of the patients ever demonstrated any ERP activity due to their lack of consciousness.
b. some patients produce ERP activity in response to the auditory stimuli of their names.
c. some patients produce a variety of strong and distinct ERP activation when presented with
action words.
d. it is impossible to determine if any of the patients retain any cognitive abilities.
Answer: b
Textbook Reference: 3.3 The Brain in Real-Time Action
Bloomโs Level: 2. Understanding
30. _______ is characterized by the inability to make sense of music while language
comprehension remains unaffected.
a. Amusia
b. Insomnia
c. Aphasia
d. Arabia
Answer: a
Textbook Reference: 3.3 The Brain in Real-Time Action
Bloomโs Level: 1. Remembering
31. The symptoms exhibited by _______ and _______ illustrate a double dissociation.
a. split brain; amusia
b. Wernickeโs aphasia; auditory verbal agnosia
c. auditory verbal agnosia; amusia
d. amusia; Brocaโs aphasia
Answer: c
Textbook Reference: 3.3 The Brain in Real-Time Action
Bloomโs Level: 3. Applying
ยฉ 2019 Oxford University Press
Short Answer
1. Sanjay is a patient with distinct damage to Brocaโs area, but he doesnโt seem to exhibit the
constellation of language impairments that characterize Brocaโs aphasia. Judy is a patient with
fairly widespread damage to the left hemisphere, not limited to Brocaโs area, and she has been
diagnosed with Brocaโs aphasia but with only some of the traditional symptoms. Explain the
implications of these findings.
Answer: It is difficult to localize multi-faceted syndromes to precise brain regions. A more
promising approach to understanding the relationship between brain structure and function is to
localize individual symptoms associated with a disorder using voxel-based lesion-symptom
mapping (VLSM).
Textbook Reference: 3.1 Evidence from Damage to the Brain
Bloomโs Level: 3. Applying
2. If MRIs were available in Phineas Gageโs time, what kinds of conclusions could a researcher
draw from the information available from an MRI scan his of brain after his accident? How
might this information contribute to our study of the relationship between the brain and
behavior?
Answer: An MRI would provide a detailed view of which areas of his brain were damaged or
missing. By comparing his behavior and cognitive abilities with that of a normal individual, we
would be able to describe the overall deficits suffered by Gage in comparison to someone
without those specific brain injuries.
Textbook Reference: 3.2 Mapping the Healthy Human Brain
Bloomโs Level: 3. Applying
3. Refer to the figure.
Identify Brocaโs and Wernickeโs areas, and summarize the types of linguistic deficits that
patients with lesions in each would typically experience. Provide an example of spoken language
that would represent lesions in each of these two cortical regions.
ยฉ 2019 Oxford University Press
Answer: Brocaโs area is in the left frontal lobe (Brodmannโs area 44 and 45) and Wernickeโs area
is located in the left temporal lobe (Brodmannโs area 22). While damage to Brocaโs area doesnโt
necessarily produce the full symptom-complex associated with Brocaโs aphasia, a lesion in this
area can result in difficulty producing language including halted and broken speech. For
example: Soccer umโฆkick…uh…ballโฆstones…game…tomorrow. A lesion in Wernickeโs area
would likely lead to the patient producing fluid speech which is largely meaningless. For
example: Mountain fillows also lant while lowering into the senacious bleem.
Textbook Reference: 3.2 Mapping the Healthy Human Brain
Bloomโs Level: 3. Applying
4. If you were trying to identify the brain areas responsible for speech recognition, how useful
would it be to compare fMRI scans of participants who heard spoken language with those who
actively read aloud the same script from a monitor? Would a direct comparison of scans in these
two conditions allow you to identify the areas responsible for speech recognition? Why or why
not?
Answer: It would not be useful to compare MRI scans; a direct comparison of scans in these two
conditions would not allow you to identify the areas responsible for speech recognition. In the
tasks described above, although the specific linguistic content is the same across both tasks, there
are far too many differences between these two conditions to draw any meaningful conclusions
about what the activated brain regions might be responsible for. For example, brain activity in
the reading aloud condition may reflect activity due to the processing of visual stimuli in general,
the mapping of symbols to sounds, or activity related to speaking. Brain activity in the listening
condition may reflect activity due to the processing of auditory stimuli in general rather than
activity that is specific to the processing of speech. In reality, multiple carefully constructed
experiments would be necessary to determine all the brain areas that are responsible for speech
recognition.
Textbook Reference: 3.2 Mapping the Healthy Human Brain
Bloomโs Level: 5. Evaluating
5. Refer to the figure.
ยฉ 2019 Oxford University Press
How do each of the machines, depicted in A and B, attempt to provide evidence for mental
activity? What theoretical assumption is shared by both machines? Compare the data each
produces and argue which is more useful and why.
Answer: Both machines were designed to measure blood flow in the brain under the assumption
that greater blood flow reflects more intense cognitive activity. Mossoโs โmachine to weigh the
soul,โ depicted in panel A, attempted to determine whether certain mental tasks required enough
cognitive activityโand hence, enough blood flow to the brainโto cause the platform on which
the participant lay to tip in the direction of the participantโs head. The fMRI, shown in panel B,
uses hemodynamic changes and direction of blood flow to demonstrate higher and lower levels
of activity in the brain as the participant is performing various cognitive tasks. Whereas the
machine to weigh the soul can only see whether blood has flowed to any location in the upper
half of the body, fMRI can measure blood flow in very precise locations within the brain.
Textbook Reference: 3.2 Mapping the Healthy Human Brain
Bloomโs Level: 5. Evaluating
6. Briefly summarize the outcome and conclusions of Hauk and colleaguesโ 2004 fMRI study
investigating where and how action words are processed in the brain. What does this reveal about
localization?
Answer: Participants in this study, when shown words related to activities occurring near
particular body regions, showed brain activation in areas related to the physical control of those
areas. For example, seeing the words kick, step, or walk produced increased blood flow to
regions of the brain related to motor control of the feet or legs, in addition to language areas.
Hauk et al. (2004) found that language is distributed not only across linguistically specific
ยฉ 2019 Oxford University Press
regions of the brain, but also non-linguistic areas, indicating that some tasks related to language
processing reside in brain areas not previously connected to language tasks.
Textbook Reference: 3.2 Mapping the Healthy Human Brain
Bloomโs Level: 2. Understanding
7. Imagine that you are a psycholinguist working with a deaf ASL signer who is having trouble
remembering and producing ASL signs that they once knew well but is able to carry out actions
such as pouring coffee. Would you expect that any brain damage that you found would be in
language-specific brain areas such as Brocaโs or motor-specific areas such as the primary motor
cortex?
Answer: Imaging research shows that ASL signers use the same language-specific brain areas
that hearing individuals use and when experiencing trauma-related signing difficulties, signers
often exhibit lesions or damage in language-specific brain regions such as Brocaโs and
Wernickeโs areas. The patient above is more likely to have damage in a language-specific brain
region than a motor region.
Textbook Reference: 3.2 Mapping the Healthy Human Brain
Bloomโs Level: 3. Applying
8. Which ERP component, the N400 or the P600, you would expect to find in a waveform
generated by a participantโs brain exposed to the following sentence: Priscilla give the toast to
her sister? Why?
Answer: The P600 would be observed in this example. The P600 is observed when the sentence
contains a grammatical anomaly, in this case, give rather than gave. The N400 is created when a
nonsensical or unexpected word is found in the sentence.
Textbook Reference: 3.3 The Brain in Real-Time Action
Bloomโs Level: 2. Understanding
9. Discuss the benefits and limitations of fMRI scans and ERP measures on the representation of
the time-course of language production.
Answer: An fMRI produces a visual representation of the areas of the brain that are active during
a behavior related to language production, but does not provide a real-time view of the activities
occurring in the brain as stimuli are being processed. Because blood flow takes time, the relevant
responses are observed several seconds after a stimulus evokes the original brain activity. An
ERP wave is created as a result of specific activity in the brain. Because it can be measured
immediately, it can help scientists track the relationship between a stimulus and our response to
that stimulus in real-time. On the other hand, fMRI scans show much more precise detail than
ERP measures regarding the spatial location of active brain regions.
Textbook Reference: 3.3 The Brain in Real-Time Action
Bloomโs Level: 2. Understanding
10. Refer to the figure.
ยฉ 2019 Oxford University Press
What does the figure suggest about how the brain distinguishes between words and icons or
objects?
Answer: Although we are not able to say that words are distinguished from non-words prior to
350 ms after stimulus onset based on the ERP data, we can say that visual stimuli begin to be
differentiated fairly early on after initially viewing a stimulus. For instance, the separation of the
orange and blue lines from all the others at 150 ms shows that we distinguish object-like stimuli
from word-like stimuli very quickly. As more time passes, we observe additional distinctions in
brain activity for the different types of stimuli.
Textbook Reference: 3.3 The Brain in Real-Time Action
Bloomโs Level: 4. Analyzing
ยฉ 2019 Oxford University Press
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