Peñaloza Claudia, Mirman Daniel, Tuomiranta Leena, Benetello Annalisa, Heikius Ida-Maria, Järvinen Sonja, Majos Maria C, Cardona Pedro, Juncadella Montserrat, Laine Matti, Martin Nadine, Rodríguez-Fornells Antoni
Cognition and Brain Plasticity Group, Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute - IDIBELL, L'Hospitalet de Llobregat, Barcelona, Spain.
Department of Psychology, Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA, USA; Moss Rehabilitation Research Institute, Elkins Park, PA, USA.
Cortex. 2016 Jun;79:14-31. doi: 10.1016/j.cortex.2016.03.009. Epub 2016 Mar 19.
Recent research suggests that some people with aphasia preserve some ability to learn novel words and to retain them in the long-term. However, this novel word learning ability has been studied only in the context of single word-picture pairings. We examined the ability of people with chronic aphasia to learn novel words using a paradigm that presents new word forms together with a limited set of different possible visual referents and requires the identification of the correct word-object associations on the basis of online feedback. We also studied the relationship between word learning ability and aphasia severity, word processing abilities, and verbal short-term memory (STM). We further examined the influence of gross lesion location on new word learning. The word learning task was first validated with a group of forty-five young adults. Fourteen participants with chronic aphasia were administered the task and underwent tests of immediate and long-term recognition memory at 1 week. Their performance was compared to that of a group of fourteen matched controls using growth curve analysis. The learning curve and recognition performance of the aphasia group was significantly below the matched control group, although above-chance recognition performance and case-by-case analyses indicated that some participants with aphasia had learned the correct word-referent mappings. Verbal STM but not word processing abilities predicted word learning ability after controlling for aphasia severity. Importantly, participants with lesions in the left frontal cortex performed significantly worse than participants with lesions that spared the left frontal region both during word learning and on the recognition tests. Our findings indicate that some people with aphasia can preserve the ability to learn a small novel lexicon in an ambiguous word-referent context. This learning and recognition memory ability was associated with verbal STM capacity, aphasia severity and the integrity of the left inferior frontal region.
最近的研究表明,一些失语症患者仍保留学习新单词并长期记忆的能力。然而,这种新单词学习能力仅在单个单词与图片配对的背景下进行过研究。我们使用一种范式来检验慢性失语症患者学习新单词的能力,该范式将新的单词形式与一组有限的不同视觉指代物一起呈现,并要求根据在线反馈识别正确的单词与物体的关联。我们还研究了单词学习能力与失语症严重程度、单词处理能力和言语短期记忆(STM)之间的关系。我们进一步考察了大体病变位置对新单词学习的影响。该单词学习任务首先在一组45名年轻成年人中进行了验证。14名慢性失语症参与者完成了该任务,并在1周后接受了即时和长期识别记忆测试。使用生长曲线分析将他们的表现与一组14名匹配的对照组进行比较。失语症组的学习曲线和识别表现显著低于匹配的对照组,尽管高于随机水平的识别表现和个案分析表明,一些失语症参与者已经学会了正确的单词与指代物的映射。在控制失语症严重程度后,言语STM而非单词处理能力预测了单词学习能力。重要的是,在单词学习和识别测试中,左额叶皮质有病变的参与者的表现明显比左额叶区域未受损的病变参与者差。我们的研究结果表明,一些失语症患者能够在模糊的单词与指代物背景下保留学习一小部分新词汇的能力。这种学习和识别记忆能力与言语STM容量、失语症严重程度以及左下额叶区域的完整性有关。