Literature DB >> 9263944

Auditory processing in individuals with mild aphasia: a study of resource allocation.

L L Murray1, A L Holland, P M Beeson.   

Abstract

This study examined the effects of lesion location (frontal vs. posterior) and nature of distraction (nonverbal vs. verbal secondary, competing task) on mildly aphasic individuals' performances of listening tasks that required semantic judgments and lexical decisions under isolation, focused attention, and divided attention conditions. Despite comparable accuracy among all groups during isolation conditions, the aphasic groups responded less accurately and more slowly than the normal control group during focused and divided attention conditions. Generally, the two aphasic groups performed similarly, quantitatively and qualitatively. Demographic characteristics such as time post stroke did not correlate with performance decrements. Independent of group, all individuals showed greater disruption of auditory processing skills when the secondary task was verbal rather than nonverbal. Within a limited-capacity model of attention, the results suggest that aphasic individuals display impairments of attention and resource allocation and that these impairments negatively interact with their auditory processing abilities.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1997        PMID: 9263944     DOI: 10.1044/jslhr.4004.792

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Speech Lang Hear Res        ISSN: 1092-4388            Impact factor:   2.297


  19 in total

1.  Binding in agrammatic aphasia: Processing to comprehension.

Authors:  Jungwon Janet Choy; Cynthia K Thompson
Journal:  Aphasiology       Date:  2010-05-01       Impact factor: 2.773

2.  Performance of Individuals with Left-Hemisphere Stroke and Aphasia and Individuals with Right Brain Damage on Forward and Backward Digit Span Tasks.

Authors:  Jacqueline Laures-Gore; Rebecca Shisler Marshall; Erin Verner
Journal:  Aphasiology       Date:  2011-01-14       Impact factor: 2.773

3.  The time course of priming in aphasia: An exploration of learning along a continuum of linguistic processing demands.

Authors:  JoAnn P Silkes; Carolyn Baker; Tracy Love
Journal:  Top Lang Disord       Date:  2020 Jan-Mar

4.  Effects of prosody on the cognitive and neural resources supporting sentence comprehension: A behavioral and lesion-symptom mapping study.

Authors:  Arianna N LaCroix; Nicole Blumenstein; McKayla Tully; Leslie C Baxter; Corianne Rogalsky
Journal:  Brain Lang       Date:  2020-02-04       Impact factor: 2.381

5.  Aphasia and auditory extinction: Preliminary evidence of binding.

Authors:  Rebecca J Shisler
Journal:  Aphasiology       Date:  2005-07       Impact factor: 2.773

6.  Language as a Stressor in Aphasia.

Authors:  Dalia Cahana-Amitay; Martin L Albert; Sung-Bom Pyun; Andrew Westwood; Theodore Jenkins; Sarah Wolford; Mallory Finley
Journal:  Aphasiology       Date:  2011-04-19       Impact factor: 2.773

7.  Treatment of word-finding deficits in fluent aphasia through the manipulation of spatial attention: Preliminary findings.

Authors:  Vonetta M Dotson; Floris Singletary; Renee Fuller; Shirley Koehler; Anna Bacon Moore; Leslie J Gonzalez Rothi; Bruce Crosson
Journal:  Aphasiology       Date:  2007-01       Impact factor: 2.773

8.  More Than the Verbal Stimulus Matters: Visual Attention in Language Assessment for People With Aphasia Using Multiple-Choice Image Displays.

Authors:  Sabine Heuer; Maria V Ivanova; Brooke Hallowell
Journal:  J Speech Lang Hear Res       Date:  2017-05-24       Impact factor: 2.297

9.  Attention in individuals with aphasia: Performance on the Conners' Continuous Performance Test - 2nd edition.

Authors:  Jaime B Lee; Masha Kocherginsky; Leora R Cherney
Journal:  Neuropsychol Rehabil       Date:  2018-04-18       Impact factor: 2.868

10.  A novel eye-tracking method to assess attention allocation in individuals with and without aphasia using a dual-task paradigm.

Authors:  Sabine Heuer; Brooke Hallowell
Journal:  J Commun Disord       Date:  2015-04-11       Impact factor: 2.288

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