There are six main types of aphasia, including sensory aphasia, motor aphasia, conductive aphasia, naming aphasia, complete aphasia, and transcortical aphasia, and their performance varies. 1. Sensory aphasia: This is characterized by severe impairment of spoken language comprehension, irrelevant answers to questions, and impractical, irrelevant, empty talk. 2. Motor aphasia: This is characterized by a good understanding of the spoken language, but an impaired ability to respond to questions, and an inability to correctly formulate the statements that one is thinking about. 3. Conductive aphasia: People with conductive aphasia have severe difficulty repeating, writing, or reading aloud a sentence, but can communicate fluently. 4. Naming aphasia: This is characterized by an inability to name things, but only to describe their characteristics. 5. Complete aphasia: severe dysfunction of language functions such as narrative, reading and writing. 6. Transcortical aphasia: severe dysfunction in reading, writing, and expression, but with good repetition. It is recommended that when aphasia occurs, it is important to go to the hospital in a timely manner and intervene under the guidance of a doctor to avoid delaying the condition.