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On 26 Nov 2003 16:04:46 GMT, Neil <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/3235934.stm > >Stroke gives woman British accent Interesting. Did you watch the video on the BBC site too? That was interesting. Only an American would imagine that her accent was British... LOL. She sounded like an American actor trying to do a British accent and failing... maybe it should be called Dick van Dyke syndrome! Ann > >An American woman has been left with a British accent after having a >stroke. >This is despite the fact that Tiffany Roberts, 61, has never been to >Britain. Her accent is a mixture of English cockney and West Country. > >Doctors say Mrs Roberts, who was born and bred in Indiana, has a >condition called foreign accent syndrome. > >This rare condition occurs when part of the brain becomes damaged. This >can follow a stroke or head injury. There have only been a few documented >cases. > >Mrs Roberts discovered she had a British accent after recovering her >voice following a stroke in 1999. > >"When people first started asking me where in England I was from and a >family member asked why am I talking that way, that is when I became very >conscious that a part of me had died during the stroke," she said. > >Four years on, she still struggles to convince people that she is a born >and bred American. >"People in America accuse me of lying when I say I was born in Indiana. > >"They would say 'What are you saying that for? Where in England are you >from?' > >"I would insist that I am not." > >A tape recording of her voice before the stroke shows Mrs Roberts used to >speak with a broad and relatively deep accent. She now speaks in a much >higher pitch. > >Doctors are still trying to find out exactly why foreign accent syndrome >occurs. > >But Dr Jack Ryalls of the University of Central Florida, said it is a >real medical condition, which can occur after a patient has a brain >injury. > >"They recover to various degrees. When they don't recover or when they >only have very, very residual effects left its heard as an accent. Its a >real phenomenon. It just hasn't been documented very often." > >Scientists at Oxford University are among those trying to get to the >bottom of the syndrome. > >Last year, they confirmed that patients can develop a foreign accent >without ever having been exposed to the accent. > >This is because they haven't really picked up the accent. Their speech >patterns have changed. Injury to their brain causes them to lengthen >syllables, alter their pitch or mispronounce sounds. These changes make >it sound like they have picked up an accent. They may lengthen syllables. > >The first case of foreign accent syndrome was reported in 1941 in Norway, >after a young Norwegian woman suffered shrapnel injury to the brain >during an air raid. > >Initially, she had severe language problems from which she eventually >recovered. However, she was left with what sounded like a strong German >accent and was ostracized by her community.
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