Patients with multimodal semantic impairment following stroke (referred to here as ‘semantic aphasia’ or SA) fail to show the standard effects of frequency in comprehension tasks. Instead, they show absent or even reverse frequency effects: i.e., better understanding of less common words. In addition, SA is associated with poor regulatory control of semantic processing and executive deficits. We used a synonym judgement task to investigate the possibility that the normal processing advantage for high frequency (HF) words fails to emerge in these patients because HF items place greater demands on executive control. In the first part of this study, SA patients showed better performance on more imageable as opposed to abstract items, but minim...
We present a case-series comparison of patients with cross-modal semantic impairments consequent on ...
AbstractWe present a case-series comparison of patients with cross-modal semantic impairments conseq...
Background The ability to efficiently select specific aspects of our semantic representations that a...
Patients with multimodal semantic impairment following stroke (referred to here as ‘semantic aphasia...
Researchers have proposed that semantic processing involves both stored semantic knowledge and mecha...
Research suggests that semantic memory deficits can occur in at least three ways. Patients can (1) s...
Different neuropsychological populations implicate diverse cortical regions in semantic memory: sema...
Semantic dementia (SD) implicates the anterior temporal lobes (ATL) as a critical substrate for sema...
Deficits of semantic cognition in semantic dementia and in aphasia consequent on CVA (stroke) are qu...
Semantic processing theories propose activation of concepts via semantic features, with interference...
Background: The ability to efficiently select specific aspects of our semantic representations that ...
Semantic cognition, as described by the controlled semantic cognition (CSC) framework (Rogers et al....
Patients with semantic dementia show a specific pattern of impairment on both verbal and non-verbal ...
Objective: Semantic verbal fluency (SVF) tasks require individuals to name items from a specified ca...
Individuals with aphasia frequently show lexical retrieval deficits due to increased interference of...
We present a case-series comparison of patients with cross-modal semantic impairments consequent on ...
AbstractWe present a case-series comparison of patients with cross-modal semantic impairments conseq...
Background The ability to efficiently select specific aspects of our semantic representations that a...
Patients with multimodal semantic impairment following stroke (referred to here as ‘semantic aphasia...
Researchers have proposed that semantic processing involves both stored semantic knowledge and mecha...
Research suggests that semantic memory deficits can occur in at least three ways. Patients can (1) s...
Different neuropsychological populations implicate diverse cortical regions in semantic memory: sema...
Semantic dementia (SD) implicates the anterior temporal lobes (ATL) as a critical substrate for sema...
Deficits of semantic cognition in semantic dementia and in aphasia consequent on CVA (stroke) are qu...
Semantic processing theories propose activation of concepts via semantic features, with interference...
Background: The ability to efficiently select specific aspects of our semantic representations that ...
Semantic cognition, as described by the controlled semantic cognition (CSC) framework (Rogers et al....
Patients with semantic dementia show a specific pattern of impairment on both verbal and non-verbal ...
Objective: Semantic verbal fluency (SVF) tasks require individuals to name items from a specified ca...
Individuals with aphasia frequently show lexical retrieval deficits due to increased interference of...
We present a case-series comparison of patients with cross-modal semantic impairments consequent on ...
AbstractWe present a case-series comparison of patients with cross-modal semantic impairments conseq...
Background The ability to efficiently select specific aspects of our semantic representations that a...