N. Martin et al., RECOVERY IN DEEP DYSPHASIA - EVIDENCE FOR A RELATION BETWEEN AUDITORY-VERBAL STM CAPACITY AND LEXICAL ERRORS IN REPETITION, Brain and language, 52(1), 1996, pp. 83-113
Citations number
36
Categorie Soggetti
Language & Linguistics","Psychology, Experimental",Neurosciences
This study investigates the changes in auditory-verbal short-term memo
ry (AVSTM) and error patterns in repetition observed in a Wernicke's a
phasic, NC, over a period of about 2 years following the onset of a le
ft middle cerebral artery aneurysm. When first tested, NC demonstrated
deep dysphasia, a disorder characterized by the production of semanti
c errors in repetition and a severe disability in repeating nonwords.
At this stage, his AVSTM span, assessed in a pointing task, was less t
han one item. As NC recovered somewhat, his performance on AVSTM tasks
improved (span increased to two items), and his pattern of error in w
ord repetition changed (fewer semantic errors, more formal paraphasias
and neologisms). Other features of his span performance after some re
covery resembled patterns associated with STM-based repetition impairm
ents (reduced recency effects and reduced word length effects). In a s
eries of computer simulation and empirical studies, we show that NC's
repetition performance can be accounted for by varying two parameters
of an interactive activation model of repetition adapted from Dell and
O'Seaghdha's (1991) model of production: decay rate and temporal inte
rval. These results provide support for the view that AVSTM performanc
e depends on storage capacities intrinsic to the language processing s
ystem. Such a model allows deep dysphasia and STM-based repetition dis
orders to be seen as quantitative variants of the same underlying dist
urbance. (C) 1996 Academic Press, Inc.