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CATEGORY SPECIFIC ACCESS DYSPHASIA
794
Citations
0
References
1983
Year
NeuropsychologyNeurolinguisticsSemantic ProcessingDisabilityNeuropsychiatryPsycholinguisticsGlobal DysphasicComputer AccessibilityAphasiaLanguage StudiesWeb AccessibilityHealth SciencesCognitive SciencePsychiatrySelective PreservationSelective ImpairmentCommunicative DisordersLanguage ComprehensionSpeech PerceptionLinguistics
A global dysphasic patient with a major left hemisphere infarction displayed an apparent absence of propositional speech and basic verbal instruction comprehension. The study examined residual auditory‑verbal comprehension in this patient following the infarction. Using matching‑to‑sample techniques, the patient showed selective preservation of foods, animals, and flowers but impairment of objects, indicating a category‑specific access deficit to full semantic representations.
In this study we report our investigations of the residual auditory-verbal comprehension skills of a global dysphasic who had sustained a major left hemisphere infarction. Clinically V.E.R.'s capacity for propositional speech and her comprehension of the simplest verbal instructions appeared to be absent. Nevertheless using matching-to-sample techniques it was possible to demonstrate the selective preservation (foods, animals and flowers) and the selective impairment (objects) of specific semantic categories. Furthermore there was evidence from analyses of response consistency and presentation rate effects that her deficit was primarily one of access to the full semantic representation of words. We suggest that this access impairment arose because the system had become refractory, such refractoriness being category specific.