Lexical access in non-fluent aphasia: a bit more on reduced processing

Authors Lizet van Ewijk, Sergey Avrutin
Published in Aphasiology
Publication date 2016
Research groups Speech and Language Therapy: Participation through communication
Type Article

Summary

Background: Lexical access problems of inflected verbs are common in aphasia. Previous research addressed these problems either in purely linguistic terms (e.g., verb movement) or in terms of lexical characteristics (e.g., frequency). We propose a new measure of verb complexity, which combines linguistic and lexical characteristics and is formulated in terms of Shannon’s information theory. Aims: We aim to explore the complexity of individual verbs and verb paradigms and its effect on lexical access, both in unimpaired people and people with aphasia (PWA). We apply information theory to investigate the impact of verb complexity on reaction time (RT) for lexical decision. Methods & Procedures: 20 non-fluent aphasic subjects and 11 age-matched and education-matched peers performed an auditory lexical decision task containing 286 real and 286 phonotactically legal non-word past tense forms (regulars and irregulars). RTs and error rates were measured. Two information-theoretic measures were calculated: inflectional entropy (reflecting probabilistic variability of forms within a given verbal family) and information load (I) (reflecting complexity of an individual verb form). The effect for these and other more traditional measures on RT were measured. Outcomes & Results: Linear mixed model analyses to the data for each group with participant and verb as crossed random effects were performed. Results show that for all groups inflectional entropy had a facilitatory effect on RT. There was a group effect for inflectional entropy indicating that for the patients with aphasia the effect of inflectional entropy was less pronounced. At the same time, I did correlate with latencies for healthy adults but not for individuals with aphasia. Conclusions: Our results demonstrate that the decrease in lexical processing capacity characteristic for PWA has a measurable effect that can be calculated using information theoretical means. According to our model, these individuals have particular difficulties with processing lexical items of higher complexity, as measured by individual I, and benefit less from the support normally provided (in comprehension) by other members of the corresponding lexical network. Finally, the proposed information-theoretic complexity measures, which encompass both frequency effects and linguistic parameters, provide a superior measure of lexical access, and have a better explanatory power for the analyses of access problems found in non-fluent aphasia, compared to analyses based on frequency only.

On this publication contributed

  • Lizet van Ewijk | Researcher | Research group Speech and Language Therapy: Participation through communication
    Lizet van Ewijk
    • Researcher
    • Research group: Speech and Language Therapy: Participation through communication

Language English
Published in Aphasiology
Year and volume 30 11
Key words afasie, lexical access, inflectional entropy
Page range 1264-1282

Lizet van Ewijk

Lizet van Ewijk | Researcher | Research group Speech and Language Therapy: Participation through communication

Lizet van Ewijk

  • Researcher
  • Research group: Speech and Language Therapy: Participation through communication