Literature DB >> 31958653

Mapping psycholinguistic features to the neuropsychological and lesion profiles in aphasia.

Reem S W Alyahya1, Ajay D Halai2, Paul Conroy3, Matthew A Lambon Ralph4.   

Abstract

Naming and word retrieval deficits are two of the most persistent symptoms in chronic post-stroke aphasia. Naming success or failure on specific words can sometimes be predicted by the psycholinguistic properties of the word. Despite a wealth of literature investigating the influence of psycholinguistic properties in neuro-typical and clinical language processing, the underlying structure of these properties and their relation to the fundamental language components and neural correlates are unexplored. In this study, a multivariate data-decomposition approach was used to identify the underlying structure within a collection of psycholinguistic properties (word imageability, frequency, age-of-acquisition, familiarity, length, semantic diversity and phonological neighbourhood density) and their influence on naming accuracy was explored in a cohort of 42 participants with a diverse range of chronic post-stroke aphasia classifications and severities. The results extracted three principal psycholinguistic factors, which were best described as 'lexical usage', 'semantic clarity' and 'phonological complexity'. Furthermore, a novel approach was used to systematically relate the influence of these psycholinguistic properties to participants' neuropsychological and lesion profiles. The findings did not show a one-to-one mapping between psycholinguistic features and core language components. 'Lexical usage' was the only factor that showed a significant difference between fluent versus non-fluent aphasia groups in terms of the influence of this lexical factor on successful naming, and it was the only factor that was related to the pattern of patients' brain lesions. Voxel-wise whole brain lesion-symptom mapping identified left frontal regions, aligning with previous evidence that these regions are related to language production functions, including word retrieval and repetition. The evidence from the current study suggests that the functional locus of psycholinguistic properties is distributed across multiple language components rather than being localised to a single language element.
Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Aphasia; Lesion-symptom mapping; Principal component analysis; Psycholinguistic; Word retrieval

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31958653     DOI: 10.1016/j.cortex.2019.12.002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cortex        ISSN: 0010-9452            Impact factor:   4.644


  5 in total

1.  Content Word Production during Discourse in Aphasia: Deficits in Word Quantity, Not Lexical-Semantic Complexity.

Authors:  Reem S W Alyahya; Ajay D Halai; Paul Conroy; Matthew A Lambon Ralph
Journal:  J Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2021-11-05       Impact factor: 3.420

2.  The cognitive and neural underpinnings of discourse coherence in post-stroke aphasia.

Authors:  Reem S W Alyahya; Matthew A Lambon Ralph; Ajay Halai; Paul Hoffman
Journal:  Brain Commun       Date:  2022-06-14

3.  What Drives Task Performance During Animal Fluency in People With Alzheimer's Disease?

Authors:  Adrià Rofes; Vânia de Aguiar; Roel Jonkers; Se Jin Oh; Gayle DeDe; Jee Eun Sung
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2020-07-21

4.  The multidimensional nature of aphasia recovery post-stroke.

Authors:  James D Stefaniak; Fatemeh Geranmayeh; Matthew A Lambon Ralph
Journal:  Brain       Date:  2022-05-24       Impact factor: 15.255

5.  A unified model of post-stroke language deficits including discourse production and their neural correlates.

Authors:  Reem S W Alyahya; Ajay D Halai; Paul Conroy; Matthew A Lambon Ralph
Journal:  Brain       Date:  2020-05-01       Impact factor: 15.255

  5 in total

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