ABSTRACT
Background
Discourse analyses yield quantitative measures of functional communication in aphasia. However, they are historically underutilized in clinical settings. Confrontation naming assessments are used widely clinically and have been used to estimate discourse-level production. Such work shows that naming accuracy explains moderately high proportions of variance in measures of discourse, but proportions of variance remain unexplained. We propose that the inclusion of circumlocution productions into predictive models will account for a significant amount more of the variance. Circumlocution productions at the naming-level, while they may not contain the target word, are similar to the content that contributes to discourse informativeness and efficiency. Thus, additionally measuring circumlocution may improve our ability to estimate discourse performance and functional communication.
Aim
This study aimed to test whether, after controlling for naming accuracy, the addition of a measure of circumlocution into predictive models of discourse-level informativeness and efficiency would account for a significant amount more of the variance in these discourse-level outcomes.
Methods & Procedures
Naming and discourse data from 43 people with poststroke aphasia were analyzed. Naming data were collected using 120 pictured items and discourse data were collected using two picture description prompts. Data scoring and coding yielded measures of naming accuracy, incorrect response type, communicative informativeness, and efficiency. We used robust hierarchical regression to evaluate study predictions.
Outcomes & Results
After controlling for naming accuracy, the inclusion of circumlocution into predictive models accounted for a significant amount more of the variance in both informativeness and efficiency. The subsequent inclusion of other response types, such as real word and nonword errors, did not account for a significant amount more of the variance in either outcome.
Conclusions
In addition to naming accuracy, the production of circumlocution during naming assessments may correspond with measures of informativeness and efficiency at the discourse-level. Reducing the burden of estimating patients’ functional communication will increase our ability to estimate functional communication using tools that are easy to administer and interpret.
KEYWORDS:
Acknowledgements
Thank you to Elizabeth Lacey, Sachi Paul, Anna Prince, Caroline Fisher, Caitlin McDermott, Katherine Modrall, and Jessica Schwartz for the time and effort you each spent with data acquisition and coding. Thank you to Annie Fox for your statistical consulting, and to Lauren Brock for your time transcribing videos in the preliminary stages of this work.
Data Availability Statement
Data available on request from the authors: The datasets generated during and/or analyzed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.
Disclosure Statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.