Title of article :
Referential Communication in Alzheimerʹs Type Dementia
Author/Authors :
Carlomagno، نويسنده , , Sergio and Santoro، نويسنده , , Anna and Menditti، نويسنده , , Antonella and Pandolfi، نويسنده , , Maria Elena Marini، نويسنده , , Andrea، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages :
15
From page :
520
To page :
534
Abstract :
This paper investigates factors that underlie reduced informative content and lack of reference in the discourse of patients with Alzheimerʹs Type Dementia (DAT). Patients with DAT, fluent aphasics and normal controls were given a referential communication task structured to assess lexical encoding of information, pragmatic/conceptual elaboration of information and effectiveness in establishing reference. The subjects also received standardised aphasia tests (CADL, Holland, 1980; and Cookie Theft Picture Description, Nicholas and Brookshire, 1993). Comparable reduction of lexical encoding of information was found in the discourse of aphasic and DAT participants both on the referential communication task measures and on the standardised evaluation with the Cookie Theft Picture Description test. However, the DAT subjectsʹ discourse on the referential communication task was less efficient in establishing reference than that of the aphasics since the former presented more misunderstandings and required more explicit prompts from the listener. Furthermore, the DAT language on the referential communication task contained confounding and irrelevant information; also, the number of these errors correlated negatively with their referring abilities. Results of the CADL test confirmed that the DAT participants had less communicative effectiveness than their lexical deficit alone predicted. Finally, examination of the performance of individual DAT subjects showed that lexical encoding of information could dissociate from effectiveness in making reference. findings support the view that difficulty in pragmatic/conceptual elaboration of discourse information content plays a substantial role in the development of reduced information content and lack of reference of DAT “empty speech”. These results are discussed in the framework of the hypothesis of early attentional/executive impairment in DAT (Perry and Hodges, 1999).
Keywords :
empty speech , Dementia , reference
Journal title :
Cortex
Serial Year :
2005
Journal title :
Cortex
Record number :
2299459
Link To Document :
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