Automatic Access to Lexical Semantics in Aphasia: Evidence from Semantic and Associative Priming

We report the auditory lexical decision performance of four patients, all of whom are clinically diagnosed as Broca′s aphasics. In a task that separates associative from semantic priming, all four patients show significant priming effects and no interaction with type of relatedness. We find no evide...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain and language 1993-08, Vol.45 (2), p.147-159
Hauptverfasser: Ostrin, R.K., Tyler, L.K.
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Tyler, L.K.
description We report the auditory lexical decision performance of four patients, all of whom are clinically diagnosed as Broca′s aphasics. In a task that separates associative from semantic priming, all four patients show significant priming effects and no interaction with type of relatedness. We find no evidence to support some of the current accounts of these patients′ linguistic difficulties in terms of an impairment in automatic processing routines. Instead, we argue that automatic access to lexical semantics is intact.
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subjects Adult
Adult and adolescent clinical studies
Aged
Aphasia, Broca - diagnosis
Aphasia, Broca - psychology
Association
Auditory Perception
Biological and medical sciences
Female
Humans
Language and communication disorders
Language Tests
Medical sciences
Middle Aged
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
Reaction Time
Semantics
Speech Perception
Task Performance and Analysis
Vocabulary
title Automatic Access to Lexical Semantics in Aphasia: Evidence from Semantic and Associative Priming
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