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Word-Retrieval Treatment for Aphasia: Semantic Feature Analysis

US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) logo

US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Language Disorders
Speech Disorders
Aphasia

Treatments

Behavioral: Semantic Feature Analysis (SFA)Training

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

NCT00125242
C3826-R

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this investigation is to further develop and test a treatment for word-finding problems in aphasia. The treatment is designed to strengthen meaning associations within categories of words (e.g., animals, tools, fruits). The treatment is also designed to be used as a search strategy in instances of word-finding difficulty. The study was devised to evaluate the extent to which treatment increases the ability to recall trained, as well as untrained, words.

Full description

The purpose of the proposed research is to examine the effects of a semantically-oriented treatment on word retrieval in persons with aphasia. The planned investigations are designed to further the development of semantic feature training so that it may serve as not only a mechanism for improving disrupted lexical semantic processing, but also as a compensatory strategy during word retrieval failures. The proposed research will also address the issue of exemplar typicality (Kiran & Thompson, 2003) by examining the effects of training typical versus atypical exemplars of various categories with individuals with different types of aphasia. A series of 24 single subject experimental designs will be conducted in the context of a group design to address the following experimental questions:

  • Will training atypical examples of living and artifact noun categories using semantic feature training result in a significantly different outcome* than training typical examples of living and artifact noun categories?

  • Will training of one category of nouns using semantic feature training result in improved retrieval of untrained categories of nouns?

  • Will effects of semantic feature training vary across aphasia types?

  • Will semantic feature training result in increased production of content during discourse?

  • Will generalization to untrained typical examples vary across generalization lists that are repeatedly exposed and those that are limited in exposure? (i.e., Does repeated exposure appear to contribute to generalization?)

    • Outcome measure will reflect acquisition, response generalization within category, and response generalization across category effects of treatment.

Enrollment

110 patients

Sex

All

Ages

21 to 80 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Diagnosis of Wernicke's, Broca's, or Conduction aphasia with significant word-retrieval deficits
  • At least 6 months post-onset of single, left-hemisphere stroke
  • Minimum of high-school education
  • Visual and auditory acuity sufficient for experimental tasks
  • Nonverbal intelligence within normal limits

Exclusion criteria

  • Diagnosed mental illness other than depression
  • Neurological condition other than that which resulted in aphasia
  • History of alcohol or substance abuse
  • Non-native English speaker
  • Premorbid history of speech/language disorder

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

110 participants in 2 patient groups

Semantic Feature Analysis (SFA)
Experimental group
Description:
Word retrieval treatment for aphasia.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Semantic Feature Analysis (SFA)Training
Participants for Stimuli Development
No Intervention group
Description:
Non-brain-injured participants provided data for development of treatment stimuli.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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