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Research Article

Treatment of semantic verb classes in aphasia: acquisition and generalization effects

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Pages 399-418 | Received 10 Jun 2010, Accepted 04 Dec 2010, Published online: 24 Mar 2011
 

Abstract

Verb retrieval difficulties are common in aphasia; however, few successful treatments have been documented (e.g. Citation. Towards theory-driven therapies for aphasic verb impairments: A review of current theory and practice. Aphasiology, 20, 1159–1185). This study investigated the efficacy of a novel verb retrieval treatment in two individuals with aphasia who experience verb retrieval difficulty. It involved training verb classes with large (e.g. cut verbs) and limited (e.g. contact verbs) sets of semantic features. Based on action representation theories, semantically based training of cut verbs was predicted to generalize to retrieval of untrained cut and contact verbs. One participant improved on trained verbs whereas the other participant did not. Neither participant demonstrated within nor across-class generalization to untrained verbs. However, both participants significantly improved in verb naming as measured by An Object and Action Naming Battery, and their predominant error pattern changed from noun to verb substitutions. Therefore, both participants improved in overall verb retrieval strategies despite limited success with verbs trained in this treatment. Implications for the design of future treatments are discussed.

Acknowledgements

This study was completed as Lauren Graham's master's thesis at the University of Maryland, College Park. The authors thank Amanda Peterson and Mohan Singh for help with reliability scoring and Erin Larter for help with error analysis. The authors are also grateful to the individuals with aphasia and their families for their participation in this research.

Declaration of interest: The authors report no conflict of interest. The authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of this paper.

Notes

1. Normative data were obtained from descriptions of Western Aphasia Battery's (Kertesz, Citation1982) picnic picture by 12 age-matched unimpaired volunteers. These individuals produced an average of 14.58 verbs while describing the picnic picture (range: 5–21).

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