Abstract
Background: Nonverbal cognitive constructs are not well understood in patients with acquired aphasia due to stroke. The relative contribution of aphasia, particularly receptive language impairment, to nonverbal function is rarely quantified in studies, although it is assumed to be substantial.
Aims: The purpose of the present study was first to investigate the factor structure of some of the WAIS‐III and WMS‐III nonverbal tasks in patients with acquired aphasia due to stroke using confirmatory factor‐analytic techniques. Second, we sought to determine the degree to which aphasia severity (both auditory comprehension and oral expression), as measured by the Language Competency Index (LCI) of the Boston Diagnostic Aphasia Examination (Goodglass et al., Citation2001), would account for variance in nonverbal cognitive task performance.
Methods & Procedures: The present study investigated the factor structure of widely used nonverbal cognitive tasks in 136 patients with aphasia due to single left hemisphere stroke, and sought to determine the degree to which language impairment accounted for nonverbal skill. Outcomes & Results: A single factor model representing nonverbal (perceptual) constructs provided the best model fit to the data. The underlying factor structure of nonverbal constructs in patients with aphasia mirrors the structure observed in healthy adults. Although the correlations between language impairment measures and nonverbal skills were moderate, language competence accounted for a minority (about a quarter) of the variance in nonverbal skills.
Conclusions: We conclude that impairment in nonverbal cognitive ability is not fully explained by language competence in people with aphasia.
Notes
This study was supported in part by grants P50 NS 068335 (MC and LTC) and R01 NS 48013 (MC) from the National Institutes of Health, and grant no. 220020087 from the James S. McDonnell Foundation (LTC and RF). No financial conflicts of interest exist with respect to this manuscript.