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Language control and parallel recovery of language in individuals with aphasia

Background: The causal basis of the different patterns of language recovery following stroke in bilingual speakers is not well understood. Our approach distinguishes the representation of language from the mechanisms involved in its control. Previous studies have suggested that difficulties in langu...

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Autores principales: Green, David W., Grogan, Alice, Crinion, Jenny, Ali, Nilufa, Sutton, Catherine, Price, Cathy J.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Taylor & Francis 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2826155/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20186261
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02687030902958316
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author Green, David W.
Grogan, Alice
Crinion, Jenny
Ali, Nilufa
Sutton, Catherine
Price, Cathy J.
author_facet Green, David W.
Grogan, Alice
Crinion, Jenny
Ali, Nilufa
Sutton, Catherine
Price, Cathy J.
author_sort Green, David W.
collection PubMed
description Background: The causal basis of the different patterns of language recovery following stroke in bilingual speakers is not well understood. Our approach distinguishes the representation of language from the mechanisms involved in its control. Previous studies have suggested that difficulties in language control can explain selective aphasia in one language as well as pathological switching between languages. Here we test the hypothesis that difficulties in managing and resolving competition will also be observed in those who are equally impaired in both their languages even in the absence of pathological switching. Aims: To examine difficulties in language control in bilingual individuals with parallel recovery in aphasia and to compare their performance on different types of conflict task. Methods & Procedures: Two right-handed, non-native English-speaking participants who showed parallel recovery of two languages after stroke and a group of non-native English-speaking, bilingual controls described a scene in English and in their first language and completed three explicit conflict tasks. Two of these were verbal conflict tasks: a lexical decision task in English, in which individuals distinguished English words from non-words, and a Stroop task, in English and in their first language. The third conflict task was a non-verbal flanker task. Outcomes & Results: Both participants with aphasia were impaired in the picture description task in English and in their first language but showed different patterns of impairment on the conflict tasks. For the participant with left subcortical damage, conflict was abnormally high during the verbal tasks (lexical decision and Stroop) but not during the non-verbal flanker task. In contrast, for the participant with extensive left parietal damage, conflict was less abnormal during the Stroop task than the flanker or lexical decision task. Conclusions: Our data reveal two distinct control impairments associated with parallel recovery. We stress the need to explore the precise nature of control problems and how control is implemented in order to develop fuller causal accounts of language recovery patterns in bilingual aphasia.
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spelling pubmed-28261552010-02-24 Language control and parallel recovery of language in individuals with aphasia Green, David W. Grogan, Alice Crinion, Jenny Ali, Nilufa Sutton, Catherine Price, Cathy J. Aphasiology Article Background: The causal basis of the different patterns of language recovery following stroke in bilingual speakers is not well understood. Our approach distinguishes the representation of language from the mechanisms involved in its control. Previous studies have suggested that difficulties in language control can explain selective aphasia in one language as well as pathological switching between languages. Here we test the hypothesis that difficulties in managing and resolving competition will also be observed in those who are equally impaired in both their languages even in the absence of pathological switching. Aims: To examine difficulties in language control in bilingual individuals with parallel recovery in aphasia and to compare their performance on different types of conflict task. Methods & Procedures: Two right-handed, non-native English-speaking participants who showed parallel recovery of two languages after stroke and a group of non-native English-speaking, bilingual controls described a scene in English and in their first language and completed three explicit conflict tasks. Two of these were verbal conflict tasks: a lexical decision task in English, in which individuals distinguished English words from non-words, and a Stroop task, in English and in their first language. The third conflict task was a non-verbal flanker task. Outcomes & Results: Both participants with aphasia were impaired in the picture description task in English and in their first language but showed different patterns of impairment on the conflict tasks. For the participant with left subcortical damage, conflict was abnormally high during the verbal tasks (lexical decision and Stroop) but not during the non-verbal flanker task. In contrast, for the participant with extensive left parietal damage, conflict was less abnormal during the Stroop task than the flanker or lexical decision task. Conclusions: Our data reveal two distinct control impairments associated with parallel recovery. We stress the need to explore the precise nature of control problems and how control is implemented in order to develop fuller causal accounts of language recovery patterns in bilingual aphasia. Taylor & Francis 2009-09-16 2010-02 /pmc/articles/PMC2826155/ /pubmed/20186261 http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02687030902958316 Text en © 2009 Psychology Press http://www.informaworld.com/mpp/uploads/iopenaccess_tcs.pdf This is an open access article distributed under the Supplemental Terms and Conditions for iOpenAccess articles published in Taylor & Francis journals (http://www.informaworld.com/mpp/uploads/iopenaccess_tcs.pdf) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Article
Green, David W.
Grogan, Alice
Crinion, Jenny
Ali, Nilufa
Sutton, Catherine
Price, Cathy J.
Language control and parallel recovery of language in individuals with aphasia
title Language control and parallel recovery of language in individuals with aphasia
title_full Language control and parallel recovery of language in individuals with aphasia
title_fullStr Language control and parallel recovery of language in individuals with aphasia
title_full_unstemmed Language control and parallel recovery of language in individuals with aphasia
title_short Language control and parallel recovery of language in individuals with aphasia
title_sort language control and parallel recovery of language in individuals with aphasia
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2826155/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20186261
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02687030902958316
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