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Original Articles

Short-term memory treatment: Patterns of learning and generalisation to sentence comprehension in a person with aphasia

Pages 428-448 | Received 01 Jul 2011, Published online: 02 Feb 2012
 

Abstract

Auditory-verbal short-term memory deficits (STM) are prevalent in aphasia and can contribute to sentence comprehension deficits. This study investigated the effectiveness of a novel STM treatment in improving STM (measured with span tasks) and sentence comprehension (measured with the Token Test and the Test for the Reception of Grammar, TROG) in a person with severe aphasia (transcortical motor). In particular, the research questions were: (1) Would STM training improve STM? (2) Would improvements from the STM training generalise to improvements in comprehension of sentences? STM was trained using listening span tasks of serial word recognition. No other language or sentence comprehension skills were trained. Following treatment, STM abilities improved (listening span, forward digit span). There was also evidence of generalisation to untreated sentence comprehension (only on the TROG). Backward digit span, phonological processing and single word comprehension did not improve. Improvements in sentence comprehension may have resulted from resilience to rapid decay of linguistic representations within sentences (words and phrases). This in turn facilitated comprehension.

Acknowledgments

The author thanks HM and her daughter for taking part in this study as well as Arpita Bose and Susan Edwards for their suggestions and assistance with data collection. The author also thanks Cathy Price for making HM's scan available and the two reviewers for their insightful comments.

Notes

1Mayer and Murray Citation(2002) also reported a study that involved STM to treat text-level reading. It is not discussed here as it focused on reading.

2This study was carried out while the author was at the University of Reading.

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