Publication | Closed Access
Effects of two cueing treatments on lexical retrieval in aphasic speakers with different levels of deficit
136
Citations
20
References
2001
Year
Lexical RetrievalNeurolinguisticsAcquired AphasiaPsycholinguisticsPhonologyAphasic SpeakersAphasiaLanguage StudiesCognitive ScienceSpeech PerceptionAphasia Neuro-rehabilitationDifferent LevelsSpeech CommunicationLanguage DisorderSpeechlanguage PathologySuperior ResponseLanguage ComprehensionArtsLinguistics
Abstract The effects of two cueing treatments for lexical retrieval were examined with three aphasic speakers who demonstrated different levels of lexical processing impairment (i.e., predominately semantic, predominately phonologic, and mixed semantic-phonologic). Each speaker received both treatments, with treatments being applied sequentially to different word lists in a multiple baseline design. Both treatments consisted of a prestimulation phase followed by the application of a response-contingent cueing hierarchy. One treatment employed semantic-level cueing, whereas the other treatment utilised phonologic-level cueing. All participants evidenced a positive response to both of the treatments and one participant (predominately phonologic-level deficit) showed a superior response to lexicalsemantic treatment.
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