Center for Brain Plasticity and Recovery, Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, DC.
Department of Neurology, Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, DC.
J Speech Lang Hear Res. 2019 Jan 30;62(1):106-122. doi: 10.1044/2018_JSLHR-L-18-0222.
Purpose Individuals with aphasia often report that they feel able to say words in their heads, regardless of speech output ability. Here, we examine whether these subjective reports of successful "inner speech" (IS) are meaningful and test the hypothesis that they reflect lexical retrieval. Method Participants were 53 individuals with chronic aphasia. During silent picture naming, participants reported whether or not they could say the name of each item inside their heads. Using the same items, they also completed 3 picture-based tasks that required phonological retrieval and 3 matched auditory tasks that did not. We compared participants' performance on these tasks for items they reported being able to say internally versus those they reported being unable to say internally. Then, we examined the relationship of psycholinguistic word features to self-reported IS and spoken naming accuracy. Results Twenty-six participants reported successful IS on nearly all items, so they could not be included in the item-level analyses. These individuals performed correspondingly better than the remaining participants on tasks requiring phonological retrieval, but not on most other language measures. In the remaining group ( n = 27), IS reports related item-wise to performance on tasks requiring phonological retrieval, but not to matched control tasks. Additionally, IS reports were related to 3 word characteristics associated with lexical retrieval, but not to articulatory complexity; spoken naming accuracy related to all 4 word characteristics. Six participants demonstrated evidence of unreliable IS reporting; compared with the group, they also detected fewer errors in their spoken responses and showed more severe language impairments overall. Conclusions Self-reported IS is meaningful in many individuals with aphasia and reflects lexical phonological retrieval. These findings have potential implications for treatment planning in aphasia and for our understanding of IS in the general population.
目的 患有失语症的个体经常报告说,他们能够在头脑中说出单词,无论言语输出能力如何。在这里,我们研究这些关于成功“内部言语”(IS)的主观报告是否有意义,并检验它们反映词汇检索的假设。
方法 参与者为 53 名患有慢性失语症的个体。在安静的图片命名过程中,参与者报告他们是否能够在头脑中说出每个项目的名称。使用相同的项目,他们还完成了 3 个基于图片的任务,这些任务需要语音检索,以及 3 个匹配的听觉任务,这些任务不需要语音检索。我们比较了参与者在这些任务中的表现,对于他们报告能够在内部说出的项目与他们报告无法在内部说出的项目。然后,我们检查了心理语言单词特征与自我报告的 IS 和口语命名准确性的关系。
结果 26 名参与者报告说他们几乎可以在所有项目上成功进行 IS,因此他们不能被纳入项目级别的分析。这些参与者在需要语音检索的任务中表现明显优于其余参与者,但在大多数其他语言测试中并非如此。在剩下的一组(n=27)中,IS 报告与需要语音检索的任务的表现相关,而与匹配的控制任务无关。此外,IS 报告与 3 个与词汇检索相关的单词特征相关,但与发音复杂性无关;口语命名准确性与所有 4 个单词特征相关。6 名参与者表现出不可靠的 IS 报告的证据;与该组相比,他们在口语反应中也检测到较少的错误,并且整体语言障碍更为严重。
结论 在许多患有失语症的个体中,自我报告的 IS 是有意义的,反映了词汇语音检索。这些发现对失语症的治疗计划以及我们对一般人群中 IS 的理解具有潜在意义。