DOI: 10.1016/0093-934x(85)90135-x Entity type: sg:Article
1985-03
TITLEPicture-naming in aphasia.
ISSUE2
VOLUME24
ISSN (print)N/A
ISSN (electronic)N/A
ABSTRACTThe distribution of picture-naming errors for Broca's aphasics (n = 9), Wernicke's aphasics (n = 9), conduction aphasics (n = 9), frontal anomics (n = 7), and posterior anomics (n = 9) was examined to determine the diagnostic power of error types in picture-naming. Negated responses were associated with Broca's aphasia, whole-part errors ("hose" for nozzle) were associated with frontal anomia, and poor phonemic cuing was associated with Wernicke's aphasia. In addition, the relative distribution of the three most prominent naming errors-phonemic errors, semantic errors, and multiword circumlocutions-tended to distinguish the two anomic subgroups from the other aphasia subgroups. Anomic aphasics produced the fewest phonemic errors and the most multiword circumlocutions; this pattern suggests minimal word-production difficulty in anomic aphasia relative to the other aphasia syndromes. Despite such group differences, the overall picture indicates that there is considerable similarity among aphasia syndromes in terms of picture-naming behavior.
N/A (note: articles not published by Springer Nature have limited metadata)
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14 TRIPLES 14 PREDICATES 15 URIs 10 LITERALS
Subject | Predicate | Object | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | articles:ce9a703b65cdb507404155eb391fdeb4 | sg:abstract | The distribution of picture-naming errors for Broca's aphasics (n = 9), Wernicke's aphasics (n = 9), conduction aphasics (n = 9), frontal anomics (n = 7), and posterior anomics (n = 9) was examined to determine the diagnostic power of error types in picture-naming. Negated responses were associated with Broca's aphasia, whole-part errors ("hose" for nozzle) were associated with frontal anomia, and poor phonemic cuing was associated with Wernicke's aphasia. In addition, the relative distribution of the three most prominent naming errors-phonemic errors, semantic errors, and multiword circumlocutions-tended to distinguish the two anomic subgroups from the other aphasia subgroups. Anomic aphasics produced the fewest phonemic errors and the most multiword circumlocutions; this pattern suggests minimal word-production difficulty in anomic aphasia relative to the other aphasia syndromes. Despite such group differences, the overall picture indicates that there is considerable similarity among aphasia syndromes in terms of picture-naming behavior. |
2 | ″ | sg:doi | 10.1016/0093-934x(85)90135-x |
3 | ″ | sg:doiLink | http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0093-934x%2885%2990135-x |
4 | ″ | sg:isFundedPublicationOf | grants:59ed8b329e6bbcf9302a75465da49196 |
5 | ″ | sg:issue | 2 |
6 | ″ | sg:language | English |
7 | ″ | sg:license | http://scigraph.springernature.com/explorer/license/ |
8 | ″ | sg:publicationYear | 1985 |
9 | ″ | sg:publicationYearMonth | 1985-03 |
10 | ″ | sg:scigraphId | ce9a703b65cdb507404155eb391fdeb4 |
11 | ″ | sg:title | Picture-naming in aphasia. |
12 | ″ | sg:volume | 24 |
13 | ″ | rdf:type | sg:Article |
14 | ″ | rdfs:label | Article: Picture-naming in aphasia. |
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