Pure word deafness (PWD) is a rare neurological syndrome characterized
by severe difficulties in understanding and reproducing spoken language,
with sparing of written language comprehension and speech production. The
pathognomonic disturbance of auditory comprehension appears to be
associated with a breakdown in processes involved in mapping auditory
input to lexical representations of words, but the functional locus of
this disturbance and the localization of the responsible lesion have long
been disputed. We report here on a woman with PWD resulting from a
circumscribed unilateral infarct involving the left superior temporal lobe
who demonstrated significant problems processing transitional
spectrotemporal cues in both speech and nonspeech sounds. On speech
discrimination tasks, she exhibited poor differentiation of stop
consonant-vowel syllables distinguished by voicing onset and brief formant
frequency transitions. Isolated formant transitions could be reliably
discriminated only at very long durations (>200 ms). By contrast, click
fusion threshold, which depends on millisecond-level resolution of brief
auditory events, was normal. These results suggest that the problems with
speech analysis in this case were not secondary to general constraints on
auditory temporal resolution. Rather, they point to a disturbance of left
hemisphere auditory mechanisms that preferentially analyze rapid
spectrotemporal variations in frequency. The findings have important
implications for our conceptualization of PWD and its subtypes.
(JINS, 2005, 11, 456–470.)