Fernandes M A, Smith M L
Department of Psychology, University of Toronto at Mississauga, 3359 Mississauga Road North, Mississauga, Ontario, L5L 1C6, Canada.
Neuropsychologia. 2000;38(9):1216-28. doi: 10.1016/s0028-3932(00)00035-x.
The validity of the Fused Dichotic Words Test (FDWT) in predicting the nature of speech representation, as determined by the Intracarotid Amobarbital Procedure (IAP), was examined in a sample of 28 children with epilepsy. Various methods of analysis (difference score, lambda, and lambda()), for the FDWT data were calculated and compared. Results showed the validity of the FDWT did not change depending on the method of analysis. The difference scores showed that 18 of the 19 patients with left hemisphere speech obtained right-ear advantages, while the patient with right hemisphere speech showed a left-ear advantage. As a group, patients with left-hemisphere speech obtained a statistically significant right-ear advantage for the lambda and lambda() indices, while the patient with right-hemisphere speech showed a left-ear advantage that was also significant for both lambda measures. Patients with bilateral speech, as a group, displayed a non-significant ear advantage. Some of the scores from the left-hemisphere group overlapped with those from patients with bilateral speech representation. Controlling for stimulus dominance effects using the lambda(*) measure did not improve classification accuracy for nature of speech representation based on FDWT scores. Finally, comparison of our data using the laterality index from a similar study, showed scores smaller in magnitude than that found in adults with epilepsy.
在28名癫痫患儿的样本中,研究了融合双耳分听单词测试(FDWT)在预测由颈内动脉异戊巴比妥试验(IAP)确定的言语表征性质方面的有效性。计算并比较了FDWT数据的各种分析方法(差异分数、lambda和lambda())。结果表明,FDWT的有效性不会因分析方法而异。差异分数显示,19名左半球言语患者中有18名获得了右耳优势,而右半球言语患者表现出左耳优势。作为一个群体,左半球言语患者在lambda和lambda()指数上获得了统计学上显著的右耳优势,而右半球言语患者表现出的左耳优势在两种lambda测量中也很显著。双侧言语患者作为一个群体,表现出不显著的耳优势。左半球组的一些分数与双侧言语表征患者的分数重叠。使用lambda(*)测量控制刺激优势效应并不能提高基于FDWT分数的言语表征性质的分类准确性。最后,将我们的数据与类似研究中的偏侧性指数进行比较,结果显示分数的幅度小于癫痫成人患者中的分数。