Publication | Closed Access
Effects of Age and Alzheimer's Disease on Recognition of Gated Spoken Words
15
Citations
37
References
1996
Year
NeurolinguisticsPathological SpeechHealthy Young AdultsPsycholinguisticsGeriatric NeurologySpeech RecognitionAlzheimer's DiseaseGated Spoken WordsSpoken Word RecognitionAging-associated DiseaseHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceGeriatricsRehabilitationSpeech CommunicationMemory LossDementiaSpeech ProcessingNeuroscienceTheoretical PredictionsCommunicative DisordersSpeech PerceptionMedicine
This study investigated the effects of normal aging and Alzheimer's disease on listeners' ability to recognize gated spoken words. Groups of healthy young adults, healthy older adults, and adults with Alzheimer's disease were presented isolated gated spoken words. Theoretical predictions of the Cohort model of spoken word recognition (Marslen-Wilson, 1984) were tested, employing both between-group and within-group comparisons. The findings for the young adults supported the Cohort model's predictions. The findings for the older adult groups revealed different effects for age and disease. These results are interpreted in relation to the theoretical predictions, the findings of previous gating studies, and differentiating age from disease-related changes in spoken word recognition.
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