Taxonomic Interference Associated with Phonemic Paraphasias in Agrammatic Primary Progressive Aphasia

Author:

Nelson M J123,Moeller S1,Basu A1,Christopher L4,Rogalski E J15,Greicius M4,Weintraub S16,Bonakdarpour B1,Hurley R S17,Mesulam M-M16

Affiliation:

1. Mesulam Center for Cognitive Neurology and Alzheimer’s Disease, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL 60611, USA

2. Department of Neurological Surgery, Feinberg School of Medicine , Northwestern University, Chicago, IL 60611, USA

3. Department of Neurosurgery, School of Medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL 35233, USA

4. Department of Neurology and Neurological Sciences, FIND Lab, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94304, USA

5. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL 60611, USA

6. Department of Neurology, Feinberg School of Medicine , Northwestern University, Chicago, IL 60611, USA

7. Department of Psychology, Cleveland State University, Cleveland, OH 44115, USA

Abstract

Abstract Phonemic paraphasias are thought to reflect phonological (post-semantic) deficits in language production. Here we present evidence that phonemic paraphasias in non-semantic primary progressive aphasia (PPA) may be associated with taxonomic interference. Agrammatic and logopenic PPA patients and control participants performed a word-to-picture visual search task where they matched a stimulus noun to 1 of 16 object pictures as their eye movements were recorded. Participants were subsequently asked to name the same items. We measured taxonomic interference (ratio of time spent viewing related vs. unrelated foils) during the search task for each item. Target items that elicited a phonemic paraphasia during object naming elicited increased taxonomic interference during the search task in agrammatic but not logopenic PPA patients. These results could reflect either very subtle sub-clinical semantic distortions of word representations or partial degradation of specific phonological word forms in agrammatic PPA during both word-to-picture matching (input stage) and picture naming (output stage). The mechanism for phonemic paraphasias in logopenic patients seems to be different and to be operative at the pre-articulatory stage of phonological retrieval. Glucose metabolic imaging suggests that degeneration in the left posterior frontal lobe and left temporo-parietal junction, respectively, might underlie these different patterns of phonemic paraphasia.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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