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ORIGINAL RESEARCH article
Front. Psychol.
Sec. Neuropsychology
Volume 15 - 2024 |
doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1404953
This article is part of the Research Topic Changing Perspectives in Speech and Language Neuropsychology, 1863-2023 View all articles
The Pavlovian Interpretation of Speech and Aphasia
Provisionally accepted- Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University Health Centre, Montreal, Canada
This paper discusses a neglected aspect of the historiography of aphasia, the role that Pavlovian conditioning played in Alexander Luria's and Wilder Penfield's understanding of the acquisition, expression, and loss of spoken and written speech. Luria was born into a bourgeois family in Tzarist Russia and pursued his research on speech and aphasia under the Soviet regime. Luria's work was condemned in the last years of Stalin's rule, but it received international acclaim in the West upon Stalin's death. Penfield was conversant with Pavlov's writing having had a working relationship with one of Pavlov's foremost students, Boris Babkin, who came to McGill University and later to the Montreal Neurological Institute after being jailed and exiled from the Soviet Union for lack of revolutionary fervor. Both Luria and Penfield, the latter as early as 1935, saw in Pavlovian conditioning mediated by specific areas of the human cerebral cortex the basic neurophysiological mechanism underlying speech and thought, and in Penfield's' case, memory, perception, self-awareness, and purposeful behavior. It is concluded that Luria and Penfield independently arrived at a general hypothesis, based on Pavlovian conditioning, that united the localization of speech, the syndromes caused by damage to speechcompetent regions, and the putative neurophysiological mechanisms that they believed to underlie speech and higher cortical functions.
Keywords: conditioned reflex, Luria, Pavlov, Penfield, Speech
Received: 26 Mar 2024; Accepted: 22 May 2024.
Copyright: © 2024 Leblanc. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
* Correspondence:
Richard Leblanc, Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University Health Centre, Montreal, Canada
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