Origins of Praphasias in Deep Dysphasia
Origins
of Paraphasias in Deep Dysphasia: Testing the Consequences of a Decay
Impairment to an Interactive Spreading Activation Model of Lexical
Retrieval
Author(s)
Nadine Martin, Gary S. Dell, Eleanor M. Saffran, and Myrna F.
Schwartz
Journal Reference:(s)
Brain and Language 47, 609-660 (1994)
Abstract:(s)
This study investigates an account of atypical error patterns within the
framework of an interactive spreading activation model. Martin and Saffran
(1992) described a patient, NC, whose error pattern was unusual for the
occurrence of higher rates of form-related than meaning-related word
substitutions in naming and the production of semantic errors in
repetition.
They proposed that NC's error pattern could be accounted for
by a pathologically rapid decay of primed nodes in the
semantic-lexical-phonological network that shifts the probabilities of error
outcome in lexical retrieval. In the present study, Martin and Saffran's account
was tested and supported in a series of simulations that reproduce essential
features of NC's lexical error pattern in naming and repetition. Also described
here are the results of a longitudinal study of NC's naming and repetition,
which revealed a shift in relative lexical error rates toward a qualitatively
normal pattern. This change in error pattern was simulated by assuming that
recovery reflects resolution of the rapid decay rate toward normal levels. The
patient data and computational studies are discussed it terms of their
significance for the understanding of aphasic impairments and their implications
for models of lexical retrieval
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