Impact of Personal Relevance and Contextualization on Word-Picture Matching by People With Aphasia

Author:

McKelvey Miechelle L.1,Hux Karen2,Dietz Aimee3,Beukelman David R.2

Affiliation:

1. University of Nebraska-Kearney

2. University of Nebraska-Lincoln

3. University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH

Abstract

Purpose To determine the effect of personal relevance and contextualization of images on the preferences and word-picture matching accuracy of people with severe aphasia. Method Eight adults with aphasia performed 2 experimental tasks to reveal their preferences and accuracy during word-picture matching. The researchers used 3 types of visual stimuli—personally relevant, contextualized photographs; non-personally relevant, contextualized photographs; and noncontextualized, iconic images—paired with 3 types of target words—labels of people or objects, actions, and socially relevant events—as the stimulus materials. Results Data analysis showed that participants (a) preferred using personally relevant, contextualized photographs rather than other types of photographs/images to represent target words and (b) performed more accurate word-picture matching when presented with target words associated with personally relevant, contextualized photographs than target words associated with noncontextualized or nonpersonalized photographs/images. Conclusions Clinically, the findings highlight the importance of using personally relevant, contextualized photographs rather than generic contextualized photographs or noncontextualized, iconic images to support the communication attempts of people with aphasia who cannot communicate effectively using natural speech alone.

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

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

Reference49 articles.

1. Can individuals who have aphasia learn iconic codes?;Beck A.;Augmentative and Alternative Communication,1998

2. Establishing functional communication board use for nonverbal aphasic subjects;Bellaire K. J.;Clinical Aphasiology,1991

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