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Attention to attention in aphasia – elucidating impairment patterns, modality differences and neural correlates

It is increasingly acknowledged that patients with aphasia following a left-hemisphere stroke often have difficulties in other cognitive domains. One of these domains is attention, the very fundamental ability to detect, select, and react to the abundance of stimuli present in the environment. Basic...

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Autores principales: Schumacher, Rahel, Halai, Ajay D., Ralph, Matthew A. Lambon
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7614452/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36336090
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2022.108413
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author Schumacher, Rahel
Halai, Ajay D.
Ralph, Matthew A. Lambon
author_facet Schumacher, Rahel
Halai, Ajay D.
Ralph, Matthew A. Lambon
author_sort Schumacher, Rahel
collection PubMed
description It is increasingly acknowledged that patients with aphasia following a left-hemisphere stroke often have difficulties in other cognitive domains. One of these domains is attention, the very fundamental ability to detect, select, and react to the abundance of stimuli present in the environment. Basic and more complex attentional functions are usually distinguished, and a variety of tests has been developed to assess attentional performance at a behavioural level. Attentional performance in aphasia has been investigated previously, but often only one specific task, stimulus modality, or type of measure was considered and usually only group-level analyses or data based on experimental tasks were presented. Also, information on brain-behaviour relationships for this cognitive domain and patient group is scarce. We report detailed analyses on a comprehensive dataset including patients’ performance on various subtests of two well-known, standardised neuropsychological test batteries assessing attention. These tasks allowed us to explore: 1) how many patients show impaired performance in comparison to normative data, in which tasks and on what measure; 2) how the different tasks and measures relate to each other and to patients’ language abilities; 3) the neural correlates associated with attentional performance. Up to 32 patients with varying aphasia severity were assessed with subtests from the Test of Attentional Performance (TAP) as well as the Test of Everyday Attention (TEA). Performance was compared to normative data, relationships between attention measures and other background data were explored with principal component analyses and correlations, and brain-behaviour relationships were assessed by means of voxel-based correlational methodology. Depending on the task and measure, between 3 and 53 percent of the patients showed impaired performance compared to normative data. The highest proportion of impaired performance was noted for complex attention tasks involving auditory stimuli. Patients differed in their patterns of performance and only the performance in the divided attention tests was (weakly) associated with their overall language impairment. Principal components analyses yielded four underlying factors, each being associated with distinct neural correlates. We thus extend previous research in characterizing different aspects of attentional performance within one sample of patients with chronic post stroke aphasia. Performance on a broad range of attention tasks and measures was variable and largely independent of patients’ language abilities, which underlines the importance of assessing this cognitive domain in aphasic patients. Notably, a considerable proportion of patients showed difficulties with attention allocation to auditory stimuli. The reasons for these potentially modality-specific difficulties are currently not well understood and warrant additional investigations.
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spelling pubmed-76144522023-04-19 Attention to attention in aphasia – elucidating impairment patterns, modality differences and neural correlates Schumacher, Rahel Halai, Ajay D. Ralph, Matthew A. Lambon Neuropsychologia Article It is increasingly acknowledged that patients with aphasia following a left-hemisphere stroke often have difficulties in other cognitive domains. One of these domains is attention, the very fundamental ability to detect, select, and react to the abundance of stimuli present in the environment. Basic and more complex attentional functions are usually distinguished, and a variety of tests has been developed to assess attentional performance at a behavioural level. Attentional performance in aphasia has been investigated previously, but often only one specific task, stimulus modality, or type of measure was considered and usually only group-level analyses or data based on experimental tasks were presented. Also, information on brain-behaviour relationships for this cognitive domain and patient group is scarce. We report detailed analyses on a comprehensive dataset including patients’ performance on various subtests of two well-known, standardised neuropsychological test batteries assessing attention. These tasks allowed us to explore: 1) how many patients show impaired performance in comparison to normative data, in which tasks and on what measure; 2) how the different tasks and measures relate to each other and to patients’ language abilities; 3) the neural correlates associated with attentional performance. Up to 32 patients with varying aphasia severity were assessed with subtests from the Test of Attentional Performance (TAP) as well as the Test of Everyday Attention (TEA). Performance was compared to normative data, relationships between attention measures and other background data were explored with principal component analyses and correlations, and brain-behaviour relationships were assessed by means of voxel-based correlational methodology. Depending on the task and measure, between 3 and 53 percent of the patients showed impaired performance compared to normative data. The highest proportion of impaired performance was noted for complex attention tasks involving auditory stimuli. Patients differed in their patterns of performance and only the performance in the divided attention tests was (weakly) associated with their overall language impairment. Principal components analyses yielded four underlying factors, each being associated with distinct neural correlates. We thus extend previous research in characterizing different aspects of attentional performance within one sample of patients with chronic post stroke aphasia. Performance on a broad range of attention tasks and measures was variable and largely independent of patients’ language abilities, which underlines the importance of assessing this cognitive domain in aphasic patients. Notably, a considerable proportion of patients showed difficulties with attention allocation to auditory stimuli. The reasons for these potentially modality-specific difficulties are currently not well understood and warrant additional investigations. 2022-12-15 2022-11-03 /pmc/articles/PMC7614452/ /pubmed/36336090 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2022.108413 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
Schumacher, Rahel
Halai, Ajay D.
Ralph, Matthew A. Lambon
Attention to attention in aphasia – elucidating impairment patterns, modality differences and neural correlates
title Attention to attention in aphasia – elucidating impairment patterns, modality differences and neural correlates
title_full Attention to attention in aphasia – elucidating impairment patterns, modality differences and neural correlates
title_fullStr Attention to attention in aphasia – elucidating impairment patterns, modality differences and neural correlates
title_full_unstemmed Attention to attention in aphasia – elucidating impairment patterns, modality differences and neural correlates
title_short Attention to attention in aphasia – elucidating impairment patterns, modality differences and neural correlates
title_sort attention to attention in aphasia – elucidating impairment patterns, modality differences and neural correlates
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7614452/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36336090
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2022.108413
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