The goal of the proposed research is to understand the nature of naming and word-finding difficulties in aphasia. The objective is to explain patterns of word production deficits in terms of damage to the cognitive/linguistic mechanisms that underlie normal word production, and then to use this knowledge toward the development of a theory of the functional organization of the brain. Two general questions will be addressed: 1) What are the causes of the grammatical class deficits? And, 2) what are the causes of the different error types in naming deficits? More specific questions include: 1) Are there different subtypes of grammatical class disorders? 2) What is the relationship between impairments in the production of nouns and the ability to produce noun phrase structure? 3) Are the causes of access failure for nouns and verbs the same as for failure to retrieve adjectives? What are the causes of failure to access function words and inflectional morphology? 4) Are different mixtures of error types the result of global lesions that affect equally all stages of the lexical access process or are they the result (at least in some cases) of different lesions to different stages of the process? 5) What relationship is there between the distribution of error types in naming and other tasks (such as reading, repetition, comprehension, etc.)? These and related questions will be addressed through a three-pronged program of research. The most important part involves the detailed investigation of the word and phrase processing performance of English and Italian monolingual aphasics and Spanish-Catalan bilingual aphasics. The two other components of the research involve the computational modeling of the patients' patterns of word production deficits and the experimental investigation of normal subjects' word and phrase production performance. This integrated approach to the study of lexical access deficits should provide important information about the organization and processing structure of the lexicon and about the functional causes of word production disorders in aphasia. These are necessary components of the larger goal of understanding the functional architecture of the brain and for developing intervention strategies for remedial training of aphasia.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01DC004542-02
Application #
6379566
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-BBBP-6 (04))
Program Officer
Cooper, Judith
Project Start
2000-09-01
Project End
2005-08-31
Budget Start
2001-09-01
Budget End
2002-08-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2001
Total Cost
$344,921
Indirect Cost
Name
Harvard University
Department
Psychology
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
071723621
City
Cambridge
State
MA
Country
United States
Zip Code
02138
Navarrete, Eduardo; Mahon, Bradford Z; Caramazza, Alfonso (2010) The cumulative semantic cost does not reflect lexical selection by competition. Acta Psychol (Amst) 134:279-89
Mahon, Bradford Z; Schwarzbach, Jens; Caramazza, Alfonso (2010) The representation of tools in left parietal cortex is independent of visual experience. Psychol Sci 21:764-71
Janssen, Niels; Melinger, Alissa; Mahon, Bradford Z et al. (2010) The word class effect in the picture-word interference paradigm. Q J Exp Psychol (Hove) 63:1233-46
Cuetos, Fernando; Bonin, Patrick; Alameda, Jose Ramon et al. (2010) The specific-word frequency effect in speech production: evidence from Spanish and French. Q J Exp Psychol (Hove) 63:750-71
Almeida, Jorge; Mahon, Bradford Z; Caramazza, Alfonso (2010) The role of the dorsal visual processing stream in tool identification. Psychol Sci 21:772-8
Mahon, Bradford Z; Caramazza, Alfonso (2009) Concepts and categories: a cognitive neuropsychological perspective. Annu Rev Psychol 60:27-51
Janssen, Niels; Alario, F-Xavier; Caramazza, Alfonso (2008) A word-order constraint on phonological activation. Psychol Sci 19:216-20
Mahon, Bradford Z; Caramazza, Alfonso (2008) A critical look at the embodied cognition hypothesis and a new proposal for grounding conceptual content. J Physiol Paris 102:59-70
Finocchiaro, Chiara; Mahon, Bradford Z; Caramazza, Alfonso (2008) Gender agreement and multiple referents. Riv Linguist 20:285-307
Knobel, Mark; Finkbeiner, Matthew; Caramazza, Alfonso (2008) The many places of frequency: evidence for a novel locus of the lexical frequency effect in word production. Cogn Neuropsychol 25:256-86

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