Title of article :
The Effect of Morphosemantic Treatment on Verb-Tense Inflection in Persian-Speaking Patients with Agrammatism: A Case Report
Author/Authors :
Dashti, Farzaneh Department of Speech Therapy - University of SocialWelfare and Rehabilitation Sciences, Tehran, Iran , Asadi, Mozhgan Department of Speech Therapy - University of SocialWelfare and Rehabilitation Sciences, Tehran, Iran , Yadegari, Fariba Department of Speech Therapy - University of SocialWelfare and Rehabilitation Sciences, Tehran, Iran
Abstract :
Background: One of the relativelycommonsymptoms in non-fluent aphasia is agrammatism. Agrammatism is characterized with
low syntactic complexity and deficits in verb inflection, especially tense markers. Verbs as the main core of sentences in the Persian
language have vital functions for people to have effective communication.
Objectives: The current study aimed at evaluating the effect of morphosemantic method on verb-tense inflection in Persianspeaking
patients with aphasia and agrammatism.
Methods: Morphosemantic treatment was conducted in five stages in a case report study. The material was 46 black and white
line-drawing pictures related to 23 verbs including 10 training, 10 expansion, and three exemplar verbs drawn in present and past
tenses. In three phases, the percentage of correct verb inflection in the training and expansion verbs was measured and also the
graph examination of level, slope of trend, and C statistic, 2-standard deviation band, effect size (percentage of non-overlapping
data), and d statistic were used to analyze the data.
Results: Both participants demonstrated significant changes in training and expansion verbs during therapeutic sessions in comparison
with the baseline. The effect of therapy was maintained for a three-week follow-up.
Conclusions: Therapy for verb inflection in spontaneous speech is clinically important. The current study demonstrated that morphosemantic
method can be successfully used for tense marker deficits in Persian-speaking patients with aphasia and agrammatism.
Keywords :
Aphasia , Agrammatism , Treatment Efficacy , Case Report
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics