Word fluency (WF) and picture naming tasks have been shown to be sensitive to different neuropathologies. Both rest on lexical retrieval, but WF is also a measure of executive function (and attention). The goal of this study is to examine the WF and naming performance of people with aphasia (PWA) and with cognitive impairment (PWCI), and to investigate whether their production skills on these two tasks are associated. We investigated error rate for the two populations, as well as error type
Standardized confrontation naming is widely used to measure language impairment in persons with apha...
Anomia is a relevant language deficit secondary to aphasia that is treated in the speech-language pa...
Poster Session 2 - NamingThese journal issues are the Special Abstract Issue of the Academy of Aphas...
Abstract: Background: Verbal fluency tasks are routinely used in clinical assessment and research st...
Background and Aims Previous studies have shown that age of acquisition affects language production ...
Novel word learning ability has been associated with language treatment outcomes in people with apha...
In this article two case studies of fluent aphasic speakers are presented. Both patients performed s...
In healthy controls, picture naming performance can be facilitated by a single prior exposure to the...
Background Verbal fluency tasks are included in a broad range of aphasia assessments. It is well ...
The age of acquisition of words (AoA) effects in spanish-speaking aphasic subjects and its influence...
Individuals with aphasia frequently show lexical retrieval deficits due to increased interference of...
People with aphasia (PWA) often present other cognitive deficits (Caplan et al., 2013; Wall et al., ...
Picture naming requires early visual analysis, accessing stored structural knowledge, semantic activ...
Adults with aphasia, right hemisphere damage or no brain damage completed a verbal fluency task alon...
Despite the common assumption that atrophy in a certain brain area would compromise the function tha...
Standardized confrontation naming is widely used to measure language impairment in persons with apha...
Anomia is a relevant language deficit secondary to aphasia that is treated in the speech-language pa...
Poster Session 2 - NamingThese journal issues are the Special Abstract Issue of the Academy of Aphas...
Abstract: Background: Verbal fluency tasks are routinely used in clinical assessment and research st...
Background and Aims Previous studies have shown that age of acquisition affects language production ...
Novel word learning ability has been associated with language treatment outcomes in people with apha...
In this article two case studies of fluent aphasic speakers are presented. Both patients performed s...
In healthy controls, picture naming performance can be facilitated by a single prior exposure to the...
Background Verbal fluency tasks are included in a broad range of aphasia assessments. It is well ...
The age of acquisition of words (AoA) effects in spanish-speaking aphasic subjects and its influence...
Individuals with aphasia frequently show lexical retrieval deficits due to increased interference of...
People with aphasia (PWA) often present other cognitive deficits (Caplan et al., 2013; Wall et al., ...
Picture naming requires early visual analysis, accessing stored structural knowledge, semantic activ...
Adults with aphasia, right hemisphere damage or no brain damage completed a verbal fluency task alon...
Despite the common assumption that atrophy in a certain brain area would compromise the function tha...
Standardized confrontation naming is widely used to measure language impairment in persons with apha...
Anomia is a relevant language deficit secondary to aphasia that is treated in the speech-language pa...
Poster Session 2 - NamingThese journal issues are the Special Abstract Issue of the Academy of Aphas...