Broca P. Perte de la parole, ramollissement chronique de destruction partielle du lobe anterieur gauche du cerveau. Paris: Bull Soc Anthrop; 1861. pag. 235–8.
Grodzinsky Y, Santi A. The battle of Broca’s region. Trends Cogn Sci (Regul Ed). 2008;12:474–80.
Eling P, Whitaker H. History of aphasia: from brain to language. Handb Clin Neurol. 2010;95:571–82.
Berwick RC, Friederici AD, Chomsky N, Bolhuis JJ. Evolution, brain, and the nature of language. Trends Cogn Sci (Regul Ed). 2013;17:89–98.
Hillis AE. Aphasia. Progress in the last quarter of a century. Neurology. 2007;69:200–13.
Hagoort P. On Broca, brain, and binding: a new framework. Trends Cogn Sci (Regul Ed). 2005;9:416–23.
Domburg P van, Deguelle F, Raaijmakers EJF, Slot S, Jentjens S. Taalstoornissen bij dementie deel 1: primair progressieve afasie. Neuropraxis 2018;1 [in press].
Greenberg VD. Freud and his aphasia book: language and the sources of psychoanalysis. Ithaca: Cornell University Press; 1998.
Damasio AR, Geschwind N. The neural basis of language. Annu Rev Neurosci. 1984;7:127–47.
Keulen ME, Uijterwaal MH, Engels MAH, et al. Taaldiagnostiek bij patienten met semantische dementie en progressieve niet-vloeiende afasie. Stem Spraak Taalpathol. 2010;16:239–54.
Knibb JA, Woollams AM, Hodges JR, Patterson K. Making sense of progressive non-fluent aphasia: an analysis of conversational speech. Brain. 2009;132:2734–46.
Mesulam MM, Thompson CK, Weintraub S, Rogalski EJ. The Wernicke conundrum and teh anatomy of language comprehension in primary progressive aphasia. Brain. 2015;138:2423–37.
Libon DJ, McMillan C, Gunawardena D, et al. Neurocognitive contributions to verbal fluency deficits in frontotemporal lobar degeneration. Neurology. 2009;73:535–42.
Mesulam MM. Large-scale neurocognitive networks and the dsitributed processing for attention, language, and memory. Ann Neurol. 1990;28:597–613.
Zhou J, Seeley WW. Network dysfunction in Alzheimer’s disease and frontotemporal dementia: implications for psychiatry. Biol Psychiatry. 2014;75:565–73.
Goodale MA, Milner AD. Separate visual pathways for perception and action. Trends Neurosci. 1992;15:20–5.
Kaas JH, Hackett TA. ‘What’ and ‘where’ processing in auditory cortex. Nat Neurosci. 1999;2:1045–7.
Ffytche DH, Blom JD, Catani M. Disorders of visual perception. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatr. 2010;81:1280–7.
Hickok G, Poeppel D. Dorsal and ventral streams: a framework for understanding aspects of the functional anatomy of language. Cognition. 2004;92:67–99.
Friederici AD. Pathways to human language: fiber tracts in the human brain. Trends Cogn Sci (Regul Ed). 2009;13:175–81.
Friederici AD, Gierhan SME. The language network. Curr Opin Neurobiol. 2013;23:250–4.
Hickok G. The functional neuroanatomy of language. Phys Life Rev. 2009;6:121–43.
Patterson K, Nestor PJ, Rogers TT. Where do you know what you know? The representation of semantic knowledge in the human brain. Nat Rev Neurosci. 2007;8:976–88.
Guo CC, Gorno-Tempini ML, Gesierich B, et al. Anterior temporal lobe degeneration produces widespread network-driven dysfunction. Brain. 2013;136:2979–91.
Catani M, Mesulam MM. The arcuate fasciculus and the disconnection theme in language and aphasia: history and current state. Cortex. 2008;44:953–61.
Saur D, Kreher BW, Schnell S, et al. Ventral and dorsal pathways for language. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2008;105:18035–40.
Agosta F, Galantucci S, Canu E, et al. Disruption of structural connectivity along the dorsal and ventral language pathways in patients with nonfluent and semantic variant primary progressive aphasia: A DT MRI study and literature review. Brain Lang. 2013;127:157–66.
Rohrer JD, Ridgway GR, Crutch SJ, et al. Progressive logopenic/phonological aphasia: erosion of the language network. Neuroimage. 2010;49:984–93.
Wilson SM, Galantucci S, Tartaglia MC, Gorno-Tempini ML. The neural basis of syntactic deficits in primary progressive aphasia. Brain Lang. 2012;122:190–8.
Mesulam M, Weintraub S. Is it time to revisit the classification guidelines for primary progressive aphasia? Neurology. 2014;82:1108–9.
Sajjadi SA, Patterson K, Nestor PJ. Logopenic, mixed, or Alzheimer-related aphasia? Neurology. 2014;82:1127–31.
Silveri MC, Pravatà E, Brita AC, et al. Primary progressive aphasia: linguistic patterns and clinical variants. Brain Lang. 2014;135:57–65.
Ueno T, Saito S, Rogers TT, et al. Lichtheim 2: synthesizing aphasia and the neural basis of language in a neurocomputational model of the dual dorsal-ventral language pathways. Neuron. 2011;72:385–96.
Li P, Abarbanell L. Competing perspectives on frames of reference in language and thought. Cognition. 2018;170:9–24.
Mesulam M, Wieneke C, Rogalski E, et al. Quantitative template for subtyping primary progressive aphasia. Arch Neurol. 2009;66:1545–51.
Gleichgerrcht E, Fridriksson J, Bonilha L. Neuroanatomical foundations of naming impairments across different neurologic conditions. Neurology. 2015;85:284–92.
Goodglass H, Kaplan E. Boston diagnostic aphasia examination. 2e druk. Philadelphia: Williams & Wilkins; 1983.