Evaluating Treatment and Generalization Patterns of Two Theoretically Motivated Sentence Comprehension Therapies

Author:

Des Roches Carrie A.1,Vallila-Rohter Sofia12,Villard Sarah1,Tripodis Yorghos3,Caplan David14,Kiran Swathi1

Affiliation:

1. Speech and Hearing Sciences, Boston University Sargent College, MA

2. Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, MGH-Institute of Health Professions, Boston, MA

3. Department of Biostatistics, Boston University, MA

4. Neuropsychology Laboratory, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston

Abstract

Purpose The current study examined treatment outcomes and generalization patterns following 2 sentence comprehension therapies: object manipulation (OM) and sentence-to-picture matching (SPM). Findings were interpreted within the framework of specific deficit and resource reduction accounts, which were extended in order to examine the nature of generalization following treatment of sentence comprehension deficits in aphasia. Method Forty-eight individuals with aphasia were enrolled in 1 of 8 potential treatment assignments that varied by task (OM, SPM), complexity of trained sentences (complex, simple), and syntactic movement (noun phrase, wh -movement). Comprehension of trained and untrained sentences was probed before and after treatment using stimuli that differed from the treatment stimuli. Results Linear mixed-model analyses demonstrated that, although both OM and SPM treatments were effective, OM resulted in greater improvement than SPM. Analyses of covariance revealed main effects of complexity in generalization; generalization from complex to simple linguistically related sentences was observed both across task and across movement. Conclusions Results are consistent with the complexity account of treatment efficacy, as generalization effects were consistently observed from complex to simpler structures. Furthermore, results provide support for resource reduction accounts that suggest that generalization can extend across linguistic boundaries, such as across movement type.

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Otorhinolaryngology

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