Aphasia intervention has made increasing use of technology in recent years. The evidence base, which is largely limited to the investigation of spoken language outcomes, indicates positive treatment effects for people with mild to moderate levels of aphasia. Outcomes for those with severe aphasia, however, are less well documented and – where reported – present less consistent gains for measures of spoken output. This study investigates the effects of a purpose-built gesture therapy technology for people with severe aphasia: GeST+. Study outcomes show significant improvement in gesture production abilities for adults with severe aphasia following computer intervention. They indicate no transfer of effects into naming gains or interactive ge...
Gestures accompany speech and enrich human communication. When aphasia interferes with verbal abilit...
Background Aphasia affects the ability to speak, comprehend spoken language, read and write. One th...
Background: There is increasing evidence that face-to-face treatments for verb and sentence producti...
Background: Using gesture as a compensatory communication strategy may be challenging for people wit...
In this study, the authors (a) investigated whether a group of people with severe aphasia could lear...
Intention and pantomime gesture treatments for noun retrieval secondary to aphasia have not been com...
As Rose (2006) discusses in the lead article, two camps can be identified in the field of gesture re...
Use of computers by the general population continues to increase and computers are now an integral p...
Computerized treatment protocols for aphasia are becoming more widely available, but their efficacy ...
This thesis is composed of two individual but interconnected studies. The first study investigated t...
The Benefits of Gesture Therapy in Persons with Aphasia. Aphasia is a disorder that results from dam...
Links between verbs and gesture knowledge suggest that verb retrieval may be particularly amenable t...
Background: Gestures play an important role in everyday communication. They provide additional infor...
Learning how to use a computer-based communication system can be challenging for people with severe ...
Purpose- We compared the effects of two treatments for aphasic word retrieval impairments, errorless...
Gestures accompany speech and enrich human communication. When aphasia interferes with verbal abilit...
Background Aphasia affects the ability to speak, comprehend spoken language, read and write. One th...
Background: There is increasing evidence that face-to-face treatments for verb and sentence producti...
Background: Using gesture as a compensatory communication strategy may be challenging for people wit...
In this study, the authors (a) investigated whether a group of people with severe aphasia could lear...
Intention and pantomime gesture treatments for noun retrieval secondary to aphasia have not been com...
As Rose (2006) discusses in the lead article, two camps can be identified in the field of gesture re...
Use of computers by the general population continues to increase and computers are now an integral p...
Computerized treatment protocols for aphasia are becoming more widely available, but their efficacy ...
This thesis is composed of two individual but interconnected studies. The first study investigated t...
The Benefits of Gesture Therapy in Persons with Aphasia. Aphasia is a disorder that results from dam...
Links between verbs and gesture knowledge suggest that verb retrieval may be particularly amenable t...
Background: Gestures play an important role in everyday communication. They provide additional infor...
Learning how to use a computer-based communication system can be challenging for people with severe ...
Purpose- We compared the effects of two treatments for aphasic word retrieval impairments, errorless...
Gestures accompany speech and enrich human communication. When aphasia interferes with verbal abilit...
Background Aphasia affects the ability to speak, comprehend spoken language, read and write. One th...
Background: There is increasing evidence that face-to-face treatments for verb and sentence producti...