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Original

Semantic verbal fluency in two contrasting languages

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Pages 431-445 | Received 02 Jun 2008, Accepted 22 Feb 2009, Published online: 21 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

This cross‐linguistic study investigated Semantic Verbal Fluency (SVF) performance in 30 American English‐speaking and 30 Finnish‐speaking healthy elderly adults with different cultural and linguistic backgrounds. Despite the different backgrounds of the participant groups, remarkable similarities were found between the groups in the overall SVF performance in two semantic categories (animals and clothes), in the proportions of words produced within the first half (30 seconds) of the SVF tasks, and in the variety of words produced for the categories. These similarities emerged despite the difference in the mean length of words produced in the two languages (with Finnish words being significantly longer than English words). The few differences found between the groups concerned the types and frequencies of the 10 most common words generated for the categories. It was concluded that culture and language differences do not contribute significantly to variability in SVF performance in healthy elderly people.

Notes

Notes

1. When education was not accounted for, the two groups differed in the total number of correct words produced when the two categories were collapsed (ANOVA: F(1, 58) = 4.75, p<.05) but not in any of the other measures.

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