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Comprehension of vernacular features in aphasia (Sandberg et al., 2022) ...
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Comprehension of vernacular features in aphasia (Sandberg et al., 2022) ...
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Hypoconnectivity of Resting-State Networks in Persons with Aphasia Compared with Healthy Age-Matched Adults
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A rational inference approach to aphasic language comprehension
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In: Prof. Gibson via Courtney Crummett (2015)
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Changes in functional connectivity related to direct training and generalization effects of a word finding treatment in chronic aphasia
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Changes in neural patterns in persons with aphasia following theory-based generative naming treatment
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How Justice Can Affect Jury Training Abstract Words Promotes Generalization to Concrete Words in Patients with Aphasia
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Abstract:
Developing language treatments that not only improve trained items but also promote generalization to untrained items is a major focus in aphasia research. This study is a replication and extension of previous work that found that training abstract words in a particular context-category promotes generalization to concrete words but not vice versa (Kiran, Sandberg, & Abbott, 2009). Twelve persons with aphasia (5 female) with varying types and degrees of severity participated in a generative naming treatment based on the complexity account of treatment efficacy (CATE; Thompson, Shapiro, Kiran, & Sobecks, 2003). All participants were trained to generate abstract words in a particular context-category by analyzing the semantic features of the target words. Two other context-categories were used as controls. Ten of the twelve participants improved on the trained abstract words in the trained context-category. Eight of the ten participants who responded to treatment also generalized to concrete words in the same context-category. These results suggest that this treatment is both efficacious and efficient. We discuss possible mechanisms of training and generalization effects.
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Keyword:
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URL: https://doi.org/10.1080/09602011.2014.899504 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4117720/ http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24805853
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Changes in Functional Connectivity Associated with Treatment Gains in Aphasia
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Analysis of Abstract and Concrete Word Processing in Persons with Aphasia and Age-Matched Neurologically Healthy Adults Using fMRI
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Rehabilitation in bilingual aphasia: Evidence for within and between-language generalization
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Rehabilitation In Bilingual Aphasia: Evidence For Within- And Between-Language Generalization
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Changes in Functional Connectivity Associated with Direct Training and Generalization Effects of a Theory-Based Generative Naming Treatment
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Development of a Theoretically Based Treatment for Sentence Comprehension Deficits in Aphasia
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A Computational Account of Bilingual Aphasia Rehabilitation
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Effects of Syntactic Complexity, Semantic Reversibility and Explicitness on Discourse Comprehension in Persons with Aphasia and in Healthy Controls
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