Cognitive rehabilitation of word meaning deafness

Theoretical accounts of pure word meaning deafness are rare; accounts of its rehabilitation are virtually non-existent. We contrast the effects of two therapies in a patient with pure word meaning deafness. One therapy required only implicit auditory access from the patient (silent reading comprehen...

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Main Authors: Francis, DR, Riddoch, M, Humphreys, G
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2001
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author Francis, DR
Riddoch, M
Humphreys, G
author_facet Francis, DR
Riddoch, M
Humphreys, G
author_sort Francis, DR
collection OXFORD
description Theoretical accounts of pure word meaning deafness are rare; accounts of its rehabilitation are virtually non-existent. We contrast the effects of two therapies in a patient with pure word meaning deafness. One therapy required only implicit auditory access from the patient (silent reading comprehension exercises). The second required explicit auditory access (auditory comprehension exercises), and thus appeared to be more suited to the exact locus of the patient's impairment. Improvement was observed after both types of therapy. However, improvement on implicit access therapy was influenced by the use of a compensatory strategy developed by the patient. In contrast, improvement on explicit access therapy was more durable, and appeared to be due to a direct effect on the audition-semantics link, rather than to compensation. We conclude that pure word meaning deafness is amenable to treatment, and that cognitive models can be useful in designing such therapy studies.
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spelling oxford-uuid:cc2bf999-03e3-4119-aaf9-7cff2555c9892022-03-27T07:20:00ZCognitive rehabilitation of word meaning deafnessJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:cc2bf999-03e3-4119-aaf9-7cff2555c989EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2001Francis, DRRiddoch, MHumphreys, GTheoretical accounts of pure word meaning deafness are rare; accounts of its rehabilitation are virtually non-existent. We contrast the effects of two therapies in a patient with pure word meaning deafness. One therapy required only implicit auditory access from the patient (silent reading comprehension exercises). The second required explicit auditory access (auditory comprehension exercises), and thus appeared to be more suited to the exact locus of the patient's impairment. Improvement was observed after both types of therapy. However, improvement on implicit access therapy was influenced by the use of a compensatory strategy developed by the patient. In contrast, improvement on explicit access therapy was more durable, and appeared to be due to a direct effect on the audition-semantics link, rather than to compensation. We conclude that pure word meaning deafness is amenable to treatment, and that cognitive models can be useful in designing such therapy studies.
spellingShingle Francis, DR
Riddoch, M
Humphreys, G
Cognitive rehabilitation of word meaning deafness
title Cognitive rehabilitation of word meaning deafness
title_full Cognitive rehabilitation of word meaning deafness
title_fullStr Cognitive rehabilitation of word meaning deafness
title_full_unstemmed Cognitive rehabilitation of word meaning deafness
title_short Cognitive rehabilitation of word meaning deafness
title_sort cognitive rehabilitation of word meaning deafness
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