| Literature DB >> 1016012 |
R Cohen, D Engel, S Kelter, G List, H Strohner.
Abstract
Matched groups (N = 25) of fluent and nonfluent aphasics, brain-damaged and normal controls as well as schizophrenics were requested to name (1) as many animals and (2) as many things that are typically yellow as possible within 5 min. The main results of Gloning & Müller (1972) as to smaller numbers of correct responses, higher percentages of repetitions, shorter association clusters, and higher popularity in aphasics could be replicated for animal task. Comparing the data from both tasks for fluent and nonfluent aphasics with the various control groups led to considerable doubts as to what extent these results follow directly from quantitative differences in verbal output or have to be interpreted as qualitative differences in memory storage, retrieval, and self-editing processes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1976 PMID: 1016012 DOI: 10.1007/BF00343241
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Psychiatr Nervenkr (1970)