Balloons, tails and bubbles: depicting speech and thought out of the brain and into the clinic.

IF 1 Q4 RADIOLOGY, NUCLEAR MEDICINE & MEDICAL IMAGING
Geoffrey D Schott
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Illustrations of the internal workings of the brain often depict arrows. In contrast, many illustrations which depict the link between certain brain functions and the outside world harness a graphic technique more usually associated with forms of popular culture such as comics. This technique comprises a balloon containing an image or message linked either by a tail emanating from the mouth when representing speech, or by a stream of bubbles emanating from the head when representing thought. Although a pictorial speech device first appeared over two millennia ago, balloons with their linkages now have various important practical clinical applications, notably in autism spectrum disorders, profound deafness in children without neurocognitive impairment, and sexual health education.

气球、尾巴和泡泡:描绘言语和思想从大脑进入诊所。
大脑内部工作的插图经常用箭头来表示。相比之下,许多描绘某些大脑功能与外部世界之间联系的插图利用了一种通常与流行文化形式(如漫画)联系在一起的图形技术。这种技术包括一个气球,里面有一个图像或信息,或者是由嘴巴发出的尾巴连接起来的,代表说话,或者是由头部发出的气泡流连接起来的,代表思想。尽管一种图形化的语言设备早在2000多年前就出现了,但带有它们连接的气球现在有各种重要的实际临床应用,特别是在自闭症谱系障碍、无神经认知障碍的儿童的重度耳聋和性健康教育方面。
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来源期刊
Journal of Visual Communication in Medicine
Journal of Visual Communication in Medicine RADIOLOGY, NUCLEAR MEDICINE & MEDICAL IMAGING-
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
14.30%
发文量
34
期刊介绍: The Journal is a quarterly, international, peer-reviewed journal that acts as a vehicle for the interchange of information and ideas in the production, manipulation, storage and transport of images for medical education, records and research.
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