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-List Of Titles -Anomia treatment with contextual priming : a case study

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/117129

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Title
Anomia treatment with contextual priming : a case study
Related
Aphasiology, Vol. 17, No. 3 (2003), p.305-328
DOI
10.1080/729255461
Publisher
Psychology Press
Date
2003
FoR/RFCD Code(s)
110300 Clinical Sciences  110900 Neurosciences
Author/Creator
Renvall, Kati
Author/Creator
Laine, Matti
Author/Creator
Laakso, Minna
Author/Creator
Martin, Nadine
Description
Background : We present a multiple-baseline single-case treatment study on anomia. The present anomia treatment technique originates from several studies whose aim was to test word-production models in a multiple object naming paradigm by eliciting naming responses in normal (Martin, Weisberg, & Saffran, 1989) and aphasic speakers (Laine & Martin, 1996; Martin & Laine, 2000). In addition to evidence in favour of interactive word-production models, the studies of Laine and Martin (1996) and Martin and Laine (2000) have suggested that the procedure, known as contextual priming, might facilitate target naming in anomic patients at least in some naming conditions. Aims : Our aim was to test further the therapeutic potential of the contextual priming technique with the following questions: (1) Does the treatment technique facilitate the naming of target words? (2) Does a particular treatment condition (semantic, phonological, unrelated) show more facilitation than others? (3) Does the treatment technique facilitate the naming of untrained control items? (4) If there is a facilitatory effect, is it enduring? Methods & Procedures : A single anomic person with a long-standing anomia was treated with contextual priming. The technique included repeated cycles of spontaneous naming attempts and repetition of target names after the examiner. In the treatment, the target items were presented in sets of five pictures that were related either semantically or phonologically or were unrelated. The treatment was carried out in a multiple-baseline design consisting of 10 baseline measurements, 27 treatment sessions along with 27 within-training measurements, and 1 post-measurement 1.5 months after the treatment. Outcomes & Results : The anomic patient showed facilitation of the target naming in all contextual conditions. Generalisation to the untrained control items was evident in the semantic context only. The effect of naming facilitation was present up to the last follow-up measurement 1.5 months post-training. Conclusions : The results indicate that the contextual priming technique can provide long-term facilitation of target naming in anomia and induce some generalisation to untreated items.
Description
24 page(s)
Subject Keyword
110300 Clinical Sciences
Subject Keyword
110900 Neurosciences
Resource Type
journal article
Organisation
Macquarie University. Macquarie Centre for Cognitive Science

Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/117129
Identifier
ISSN:0268-7038
Identifier
mq-rm-2009011360
Language
eng
Reviewed
Reviewed
Save/E-mail Citation
Citation Format
E-mail Address
Subject
"Aphasiology"
 
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