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  • Title: Verb retrieval in aphasia. 1. Characterizing single word impairments.
    Author: Berndt RS, Mitchum CC, Haendiges AN, Sandson J.
    Journal: Brain Lang; 1997 Jan; 56(1):68-106. PubMed ID: 8994699.
    Abstract:
    The ability of aphasic patients to produce words from the grammatical classes of nouns and verbs was investigated in tasks that elicited these types of words in isolation. Eleven chronic aphasic patients produced nouns and verbs in picture naming, videotaped scene naming, sentence completion, naming from definition, and oral reading. Comprehension of the meanings of nouns and verbs was tested in word/picture and word/video scene matching, and appreciation of noun/verb grammatical class differences was tested with two metalinguistic tasks. Five patients demonstrated significantly more difficulty producing verbs than nouns, two patients were significantly more impaired producing nouns than verbs, and the remaining four patients showed no difference between the two classes. There was no improvement in verb production when naming actions presented on videotape, suggesting that selective verb impairments are not attributable to conceptual difficulty in identifying actions in static pictures. Selective noun impairments occurred in the context of severe anomia, as reported in previous studies. Selective verb impairments were demonstrated for both agrammatic and fluent (Wernicke) patients, indicating that such deficits are not necessarily associated with the nonfluent and morphologically impoverished production that is characteristic of agrammatism. There was no indication that single word comprehension was affected in these patients in a manner consonant with their production impairments. Results are interpreted in light of current models of lexical organization and processing.
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