Aphasia is a language disorder caused by partial damage to the brain responsible for the language. For most people, these are part of the left side (hemisphere) of the brain. Aphasia usually occurs suddenly as a result of stroke or head trauma usually, but it can also develop slowly like a brain tumor. This illness impairs linguistic expression and understanding as well as reading and writing. "Aphasia may be related to speech disorders such as dysarthria or language loss caused by brain damage as well."
Wernicke aphasia, also known as aphasia, sensory aphasia or aphasia, is an aphasia that individuals have difficulty understanding sentences and spoken language. Patients with Wernicke aphasia show fluent speech characterized by typical speech rate, full syntactic ability, and simple utterances. Writing often reflects the language as it often lacks content or meaning. In most cases, Wernicke aphasic patients do not have movement disorders (ie hemiplegia). Therefore, they may produce many speech without much meaning. Wernicke's aphasia was named after Carl Wernicke. And it is praised for finding brain regions responsible for language understanding. People with Wernic aphasia often do not know the mistakes in words and are not aware that their words are meaningless. They usually do not understand the walls of the most serious words.
The term receptive aphasia is actually somewhat misleading. It also affects all aspects of audio output. People with receptive aphasia often use the word fluent aphasia to maintain the ability to speak fluently. However, the word content often becomes confusing or meaningless. In the most serious form, a person does not recognize verbal and / or written text. They will not be able to understand sentences or follow conversations. However, people usually maintain a constant understanding. For example, he can recognize some but not all words, or simple but not complex sentences. Familiar words (such as pills) are still meaningful, but there is a possibility that they may be unable to understand less common words (medicine etc.).