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Research Reports

Aphasia and text writing

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Pages 230-243 | Received 04 Aug 2008, Accepted 27 Mar 2009, Published online: 10 Feb 2010
 

Abstract

Background: Good writing skills are needed in almost every aspect of life today, and there is a growing interest in research into acquired writing difficulties. Most of the findings reported so far, however, are based on words produced in isolation. The present study deals with the production of entire texts.

Aims: The aim was to characterize written narratives produced by a group of participants with aphasia.

Methods & Procedures: Eight persons aged 28–63 years with aphasia took part in the study. They were compared with a reference group consisting of ten participants aged 21–30 years. All participants were asked to write a personal narrative titled ‘I have never been so afraid’ and to perform a picture-based story-generation task called the ‘Frog Story’. The texts were written on a computer.

Outcome & Results: The group could be divided into participants with low, moderate, and high general performance, respectively. The texts written by the participants in the group with moderate and high writing performance had comparatively good narrative structure despite indications of difficulties on other linguistic levels.

Conclusions & Implications: Aphasia appeared to influence text writing on different linguistic levels. The impact on overall structure and coherence was in line with earlier findings from the analysis of spoken and written discourse and the implication of this is that the written modality should also be included in language rehabilitation.

Acknowledgements

The authors wish to thank Dr T. Coggins for generously sharing his methodology for the analysis of narrative structure. This work was financially supported by the Swedish Council for Working Life (Grant Number F0905/1995). Declaration of interest: The authors report no conflicts of interest. The authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of the paper.

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