Comments
johnnyosullivan12 t1_jbcfb8d wrote
Jaysus, prostate cancer is feckin' awful.
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Slim_Thunder t1_jbd5pde wrote
How could something like this happen so close to the day of st patrick lad?
(Leprechaun from lucky charms accent)
CambriaKilgannonn t1_jbckh42 wrote
How does that work? Just your brain switching to what it thinks an irish accent is? Is there a special part of your brain for storing accents?
Jemeloo t1_jbcnyye wrote
I hate when they say they developed certain kind of accents. What happens is their speech is afflicted in such a way that it sounds like such-n-such accent
OneHumanPeOple t1_jbctqlq wrote
There was one woman who had a crappy British accent after a stroke and she even changed the word “dress” to “frock.” So it’s more complicated than just having pronunciation that sounds similar. The brain is attempting to copy a foreign accent.
CrossroadsWoman t1_jbdhe77 wrote
But the question is how would your brain even know to do that? I barely know what a frock is, I can’t imagine my brain suddenly using that word regularly. It’s just so crazy!
casino_alcohol t1_jbdwpgk wrote
I’m guessing it only does it to the extent that your brain knows it.
Also your brain probably knows what a frock is as you have likely heard it or read it in same way. Your conscience mind may not think or remember it, but your brain might still have that knowledge locked up somewhere.
Velbalenos t1_jbevzq9 wrote
It sounds a bit like some dreams - I can’t speak for everyone obviously - but I’ve had dreams when ive thought, or met something that I haven’t thought about in years. But it’s clearly locked in there somewhere.
WrathOfTheHydra t1_jbg2gze wrote
I took 4 years of French and have forgotten most of it. But I will have a dream once in a blue moon where I've had full-blown conversations with people in French. Even having woken up and checked some of the vocab used and it seems to have been at least mostly correct. Pisses me off because when awake I absolutely cannot speak French for the life of me. I think part of it is in dreams you don't need to feel careful or second guess yourself, idk.
Velbalenos t1_jbgmdfi wrote
That is just amazing, especially knowing so much detail. Really makes you think what else is locked up away in there, memories, experience, thoughts, and the potential of all that.
kptkrunch t1_jbfhghs wrote
Yeah, now everyone who read this thread has the potential to start calling dresses frocks if they were to develop foreign accent syndrome
dIoIIoIb t1_jbe33iy wrote
you know barely, but you do
it's like if the road you usually take to go to work is suddenly destroyed, so you're forced to take another one that you've almost never taken before, but you're pretty sure it arrives in the same place, eventually. Maybe it's twice as long or it goes through the Irish part of town, but it gets there.
When your brain gets damaged it stops being able to recall certain pieces of information but not others, some of its roads are broken and others aren't, so it has to work with what's left.
Memory is a network, you can completely forget certain things or skills or events while perfectly remembering others. the part of your brain that held "words I commonly use" gets damaged so it resorts to alternatives that is pretty sure mean the same thing
zzaman t1_jbe691s wrote
I wonder if different people have different parts of towns in their brain, or might we all have an irish/British brain detour
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tacoaboutfox t1_jbed7am wrote
Ive had a few TBIs, the aphantasia is real. I used to study neurology, ironically, now I struggle joining words together.
futureshocked2050 t1_jbed63h wrote
damn that's a great explanation
caedin8 t1_jbdkf9n wrote
Doesn’t mean it isn’t possible
evolvaer t1_jbdvbm5 wrote
Double negatives
QncyFie t1_jbe01w5 wrote
What the frock?
kitd t1_jbees1b wrote
It's another word for 'dress', more commonly used in some regions of the UK.
QncyFie t1_jbem2mo wrote
Aha, k let me rephrase my response then:
"What the frock, U K?"
Mega__Maniac t1_jbex2dt wrote
Are you asking if he is ok?
dbx999 t1_jbez269 wrote
Blimey avast ye dastardly lad
abandcaIIedmetaIIica t1_jbf4m3k wrote
Furniture starts floating around
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Rich_Acanthisitta_70 t1_jbe6fkt wrote
You're right. That's actually what's really happening according to what I've found.
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Pudding_Hero t1_jbe7ltc wrote
So Irish accent
thegooniegodard t1_jbe8jxl wrote
My mother was in a terrible automobile accident in the early 2000s. Due to damage to her temporal lobe, for the remainder of her life she spoke in what sounded like an Eastern European or Russian accent until she passed from bone cancer 10 years later. My mother was born and raised in Michigan (United States) and had no Eastern European or Russian background. The brain is a marvel.
brasslamp t1_jbegubw wrote
Did it sound like Boris and Natasha from Rocky and Bullwinkle?
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TheMoonMilker t1_jbh33zv wrote
A perfect background for a KGB sleeper agent
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Instacartdoctor t1_jbevj8d wrote
Got to remember that before this they were probably considered to be possessed by demons.
Juskit10around t1_jbcpvr9 wrote
There are so many wild and crazy neurological disorders and afflictions. But for some reason, foreign accent syndrome really blows my mind. It doesn’t compute. I could reason slurring, a lisp, stutters even….but FAS makes me glitch. It seems so bizarre, even though I know it’s serious and the causation(s)behind it is serious.
sillymanbilly t1_jbddt49 wrote
What if we later find that our gut biome or whatever is basically holding all the data for human civilization inside, and when we get really sick and it throws off the balance, we can get reprogrammed. Hmmm
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PsychologicalLuck343 t1_jbhkwgx wrote
Diet affects the composition of the biome most of all. It would be funny if we discovered that linguini al fredo made us feel sexy or a big green salad made us more brainy.
Morgodai_K t1_jbegx1w wrote
I wouldn't be surprised if a collective consciousness is discovered eventually. Haven't there been at least a couple of cases of people with injuries to their brain suddenly becoming fluent in a language they couldn't previously speak?
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Morgodai_K t1_jbfz5pm wrote
Ah, gotcha. Missed that part.
Instacartdoctor t1_jbevzhs wrote
It’s in there I’m sure of it… I’ve observed it I’m my family… whenever one of us is sick we’re total assholes and positive we’re right!
laffing_is_medicine t1_jbdhhep wrote
Is this why celebrities start talking in a British accent once they go crazy?
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cherryblonde9 t1_jbd6xie wrote
When your ancestors come out to play
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marketrent OP t1_jbbbflh wrote
Excerpt from the linked summary^1,2 by Vishwam Sankaran:
>The 50-year-old man from North Carolina, who had metastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer, showed symptoms consistent with foreign accent syndrome (FAS), according to a recent study in the British Medical Journal.
>The new research marks the first reported instance of a person developing FAS linked to a prostate cancer diagnosis.
>While the 50-year-old lived in England in his 20s and had friends from Ireland, the case study mentions that he had reportedly never spoken with the Irish accent.
>“His accent was uncontrollable, present in all settings and gradually became persistent” until his death, researchers wrote in the study.
>Scientists suspect the patient‘s voice change was likely due to paraneoplastic neurological disorder (PND) – a condition in which a cancer patient’s immune system attacks their nervous system, including parts of the spinal cord, nerves and muscles.
>“His presentation was most consistent with an underlying PND,” they said.
>FAS is a speech disorder that causes a sudden change to a person’s speech patterns, with previous studies finding it to be a condition linked to brain damage, such as following a stroke.
>Since the first-ever diagnosis of the condition in 1907, there have so far been over 110 known cases of the syndrome across the world.
^1 Scientists reveal why American man with prostate cancer developed ‘uncontrolled’ Irish accent, Vishwam Sankaran for the Independent, https://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/american-man-irish-brogue-prostate-cancer-b2292537.html
^2 Broderick A, Labriola MK, Shore N, et al. Foreign accent syndrome as a heralding manifestation of transformation to small cell neuroendocrine prostate cancer. BMJ Case Reports CP 2023;16:e251655. http://doi.org/10.1136/bcr-2022-251655
Domo230 t1_jbeej9r wrote
I bet you the guy doesn't sound even the slightest bit Irish.
Smellbringer t1_jbcv6eg wrote
The weirder part was when he started river dancing.
gerberag t1_jbczdmh wrote
Pretty sure they're saying Irish speech is a mental disease.
It explains a lot.
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Unlucky-Apartment347 t1_jbdue2i wrote
Para neoplastic anti neuronal antibody.
Relative-Dream-4804 t1_jbebb4h wrote
He was Irish in another life.
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Durable_me t1_jbfjam8 wrote
So actually what this article is saying is that being Irish is a desease of the nervous system...?
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drguyphd t1_jbnjnyq wrote
Sure look it, he’ll be grand so!
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boardingpass10 t1_jbdj69a wrote
Is this essentially Limbic encephalitis? Haven’t heard of it manifesting in altered accent but can certainly cause language disturbance
FlamingBall_ t1_jbyxhnx wrote
Or demonic manifestation
wifespissed t1_jbdl6df wrote
Man, out of all the accents. Poor guy.
blowfish1717 t1_jbdz93s wrote
Obviously, Irish accent is a symptom of brain damage. Various reasons, but usually too much drinking.
BookDumb-StreetDumb t1_jbbxxqy wrote
What a terrible affliction, I can't imagine the pain this must be causing the patient and their family. Truly heartbreaking that anyone would have to go through that.
The cancer sucks, too.