Sarah Scott aphasia recovery video 7, uploaded on May 20, 2015 (Broca's aphasia)
Sarah Scott is a young woman who had an ischemic stroke (Wikipedia; 維基百科) in 2009 and is recovering from aphasia. In the videos below, you can hear Sarah's wonderfully
dedicated mom in the background. For years and years, Sarah's mom has been patiently acting as her speech therapist, giving her hints and constantly encouraging her.
Note that professional speech-language pathologists (SLPs, also called speech therapists: 言語治療師/言语治疗师 in Chinese) make good money: this is an excellent career choice if you are a caring person who is deeply interested in linguistics.
One question to think about: What kind of aphasia does Sarah have: receptive aphasia or expressive aphasia? In other words, does Sarah have trouble understanding others (receptive aphasia) or speaking (expressive aphasia)?
Remember:
receive (VB) = to understand what people say (ADJ = receptive)
express yourself = to say what you mean (ADJ = expressive)
Sarah Scott videos (2010~2015)
Sarah Scott aphasia recovery video 1, uploaded on March 1, 2010 (Broca's aphasia) |
Sarah Scott aphasia recovery video 2, uploaded on September 7, 2010 (Broca's aphasia) |
Sarah Scott aphasia recovery video 4, uploaded on May 13, 2012 (Broca's aphasia) |
Sarah Scott aphasia recovery video 6, uploaded on May 15, 2014 (Broca's aphasia)
Sarah Scott aphasia recovery video 7, uploaded on May 20, 2015 (Broca's aphasia)
Jill Bolte Taylor Video
Jill Bolte Taylor is a neuroscientist who had a stroke. She tells how how it feels in this TED.COM video (Jill Bolte Taylor: My Stroke of Insight). Don't forget to turn on the subtitles and the interactive transcript:
6-Don't forget to turn on the interactive transcript |
7-How it feels to have a stroke |
How or why do people get strokes? If you want to find out, here is one suggestion: