PURPOSE: To determine whether the naming impairment in aphasia is influenced by error learning and whether error learning is related to type of retrieval strategy. METHOD: Nine participants with aphasia and 10 neurologically intact controls named familiar proper noun concepts. When experiencing tip-of-the-tongue naming failure (TOT) in an initial TOT-elicitation phase, participants were instructed to adopt phonological or semantic self-cued retrieval strategies. In the error learning manipulation, items evoking TOT states during TOT elicitation were randomly assigned to a short or long time condition in which participants were encouraged to continue to try to retrieve the name for either 20 s (short interval) or 60 s (long). The incidence of TOT on the same items was measured on a post-test after 48 hr. Error learning was defined as a higher rate of recurrent TOTs (TOT at both TOT elicitation and post-test) for items assigned to the long (versus short) time condition. RESULTS: In the phonological condition, participants with aphasia showed error learning, whereas controls showed a pattern opposite to error learning. There was no evidence for error learning in the semantic condition for either group. CONCLUSION:Error learning is operative in aphasia but is dependent on the type of strategy used during naming failure.
RCT Entities:
PURPOSE: To determine whether the naming impairment in aphasia is influenced by error learning and whether error learning is related to type of retrieval strategy. METHOD: Nine participants with aphasia and 10 neurologically intact controls named familiar proper noun concepts. When experiencing tip-of-the-tongue naming failure (TOT) in an initial TOT-elicitation phase, participants were instructed to adopt phonological or semantic self-cued retrieval strategies. In the error learning manipulation, items evoking TOT states during TOT elicitation were randomly assigned to a short or long time condition in which participants were encouraged to continue to try to retrieve the name for either 20 s (short interval) or 60 s (long). The incidence of TOT on the same items was measured on a post-test after 48 hr. Error learning was defined as a higher rate of recurrent TOTs (TOT at both TOT elicitation and post-test) for items assigned to the long (versus short) time condition. RESULTS: In the phonological condition, participants with aphasia showed error learning, whereas controls showed a pattern opposite to error learning. There was no evidence for error learning in the semantic condition for either group. CONCLUSION:Error learning is operative in aphasia but is dependent on the type of strategy used during naming failure.
Authors: Sid E O'Bryant; Joy D Humphreys; Glenn E Smith; Robert J Ivnik; Neill R Graff-Radford; Ronald C Petersen; John A Lucas Journal: Arch Neurol Date: 2008-07