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Training flexible conceptual retrieval in stroke aphasia

Semantic therapy in post-stroke aphasia typically focusses on strengthening links between conceptual representations and their lexical-articulatory forms to aid word retrieval. However, research has shown that semantic deficits in this group can affect both verbal and non-verbal tasks, particularly...

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Autores principales: Stampacchia, Sara, Hallam, Glyn P., Thompson, Hannah E., Nathaniel, Upasana, Lanzoni, Lucilla, Smallwood, Jonathan, Lambon Ralph, Matthew A., Jefferies, Elizabeth
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7614451/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33715583
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09602011.2021.1895847
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author Stampacchia, Sara
Hallam, Glyn P.
Thompson, Hannah E.
Nathaniel, Upasana
Lanzoni, Lucilla
Smallwood, Jonathan
Lambon Ralph, Matthew A.
Jefferies, Elizabeth
author_facet Stampacchia, Sara
Hallam, Glyn P.
Thompson, Hannah E.
Nathaniel, Upasana
Lanzoni, Lucilla
Smallwood, Jonathan
Lambon Ralph, Matthew A.
Jefferies, Elizabeth
author_sort Stampacchia, Sara
collection PubMed
description Semantic therapy in post-stroke aphasia typically focusses on strengthening links between conceptual representations and their lexical-articulatory forms to aid word retrieval. However, research has shown that semantic deficits in this group can affect both verbal and non-verbal tasks, particularly in patients with deregulated retrieval as opposed to degraded knowledge. This study therefore aimed to facilitate semantic cognition in a sample of such patients with post-stroke semantic aphasia (SA) by training the identification of both strong and weak semantic associations and providing explicit pictorial feedback that demonstrated both common and more unusual ways of linking concepts together. We assessed the effects of this training on (i) trained and untrained items; and (ii) trained and untrained tasks in eleven individuals with SA. In the training task, the SA group showed improvement with practice, particularly for trained items. A similar untrained task using pictorial stimuli (Camel and Cactus Test) also improved. Together, these results suggest that semantic training can be beneficial in patients with SA and may show some degree of generalisation to untrained situations. Future research should seek to understand which patients are most likely to benefit from this type of training.
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spelling pubmed-76144512023-04-19 Training flexible conceptual retrieval in stroke aphasia Stampacchia, Sara Hallam, Glyn P. Thompson, Hannah E. Nathaniel, Upasana Lanzoni, Lucilla Smallwood, Jonathan Lambon Ralph, Matthew A. Jefferies, Elizabeth Neuropsychol Rehabil Article Semantic therapy in post-stroke aphasia typically focusses on strengthening links between conceptual representations and their lexical-articulatory forms to aid word retrieval. However, research has shown that semantic deficits in this group can affect both verbal and non-verbal tasks, particularly in patients with deregulated retrieval as opposed to degraded knowledge. This study therefore aimed to facilitate semantic cognition in a sample of such patients with post-stroke semantic aphasia (SA) by training the identification of both strong and weak semantic associations and providing explicit pictorial feedback that demonstrated both common and more unusual ways of linking concepts together. We assessed the effects of this training on (i) trained and untrained items; and (ii) trained and untrained tasks in eleven individuals with SA. In the training task, the SA group showed improvement with practice, particularly for trained items. A similar untrained task using pictorial stimuli (Camel and Cactus Test) also improved. Together, these results suggest that semantic training can be beneficial in patients with SA and may show some degree of generalisation to untrained situations. Future research should seek to understand which patients are most likely to benefit from this type of training. 2022-08-01 2021-03-14 /pmc/articles/PMC7614451/ /pubmed/33715583 http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09602011.2021.1895847 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under a CC BY 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) International license.
spellingShingle Article
Stampacchia, Sara
Hallam, Glyn P.
Thompson, Hannah E.
Nathaniel, Upasana
Lanzoni, Lucilla
Smallwood, Jonathan
Lambon Ralph, Matthew A.
Jefferies, Elizabeth
Training flexible conceptual retrieval in stroke aphasia
title Training flexible conceptual retrieval in stroke aphasia
title_full Training flexible conceptual retrieval in stroke aphasia
title_fullStr Training flexible conceptual retrieval in stroke aphasia
title_full_unstemmed Training flexible conceptual retrieval in stroke aphasia
title_short Training flexible conceptual retrieval in stroke aphasia
title_sort training flexible conceptual retrieval in stroke aphasia
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7614451/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33715583
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09602011.2021.1895847
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