Titre du document

Treatment of naming in nonfluent aphasia through manipulation of intention and attention: A phase 1 comparison of two novel treatments

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Nom du corpus

Ortho

Auteur(s)
  • BRUCE CROSSON 1
  • KATHERINE S. FABRIZIO 2
  • FLORIS SINGLETARY 3
  • M. ALLISON CATO 2
  • CHRISTINA E. WIERENGA 1
  • R. BRUCE PARKINSON 2
  • MEGAN E. SHEROD 1
  • ANNA BACON MOORE 4
  • MARIBEL CIAMPITTI 5
  • BETH HOLIWAY 3
  • SUSAN LEON 1
  • AMY RODRIGUEZ 1
  • DIANE L. KENDALL 1
  • ILANA F. LEVY 2
  • LESLIE J. GONZALEZ ROTHI 1
Affiliation(s)
  • Brain Rehabilitation Research Center, Malcom Randall VA Medical Center, Gainesville, Florida
  • Department of Clinical & Health Psychology, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida
  • Brooks Center for Rehabilitation Studies, University of Florida, Jacksonville, Florida
  • Aging Veterans with Vision Loss Center, Atlanta VA Medical Center, Atlanta, Georgia
  • Department of Neurology, University of Florida Health Sciences Center, Jacksonville, Florida
Langue(s) du document
Anglais
Revue

Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society

Éditeur
Cambridge
Année de publication
2007
Type de publication
Journal
Type de document
Research-article
Résumé

Twenty-three chronic nonfluent aphasia patients with moderate or severe word-finding impairments and 11 with profound word-finding impairments received two novel picture-naming treatments. The intention treatment initiated picture-naming trials with a complex left-hand movement and was designed to enhance right frontal participation during word retrieval. The attention treatment required patients to view visual stimuli for picture-naming trials in their left hemispace and was designed to enhance right posterior perisylvian participation during word retrieval. Because the intention treatment addressed action mechanisms and nonfluent aphasia reflects difficulty initiating or maintaining action (i.e., language output), it was hypothesized that intention component of the treatment would enhance re-acquisition of picture naming more than the attention component. Patients with moderate and severe word-finding impairment showed gains with both treatments but greater incremental improvement from one treatment phase to the next with the intention than the attention treatment. Thus, the hypothesis that intention component would be a more active constituent than the attention component was confirmed for these patients. Patients with profound word-finding impairment showed some improvement with both treatments but no differential effects for the intention treatment. Almost all patients who showed treatment gains on either treatment also demonstrated generalization from trained to untrained items. (JINS, 2007, 13, 582–594.)

Mots-clés d'auteur
  • Intention
  • Attention
  • Rehabilitation of speech and language disorders
  • Language therapy
  • Treatment outcome
  • Aphasia
Catégories INIST
  • 1 - sciences humaines et sociales
Score qualité du texte
9.436
Version PDF
1.3
Présence de XML structuré
Non
Identifiant ISTEX
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Nom du fichier dans la ressource
ortho-ang_0063
ark:/67375/6GQ-999FNMR0-9
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