Ressource pédagogique : Age of acquisition affects word retrieval in spontaneous speech produced by patients with Alzheimer's disease / Frédérique Gayraud, Mélissa Barkat-Defradas

cours / présentation - Date de création : 22-06-2012
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Présentation de: Age of acquisition affects word retrieval in spontaneous speech produced by patients with Alzheimer's disease / Frédérique Gayraud, Mélissa Barkat-Defradas

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Langue du document : Français
Type pédagogique : cours / présentation
Niveau : licence, master
Durée d'exécution : 23 minutes 41 secondes
Contenu : image en mouvement
Document : video/mp4
Taille : 191.59 Mo
Droits d'auteur : libre de droits, gratuit
Droits réservés à l'éditeur et aux auteurs. Tous droits réservés à l'Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail et aux auteurs.

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Description (résumé)

Age of acquisition affects word retrieval in spontaneous speech produced by patients with Alzheimer's disease / Frédérique Gayraud, Mélissa Barkat-Defradas. In "Perspectives neuropsycholinguistiques sur l'aphasie - NeuroPsychoLinguistic Perspectives on Aphasia", colloque international organisé par l'Unité de Recherche Interdisciplinaire Octogone de l'Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail (France). Toulouse, 21-23 juin 2012. Typical assessment of language in Alzheimer’s disease typically relies on experimental tasks such as confrontation naming or fluency tasks. These widely used methods show several advantages such as rapidity of assessment, standardization and good control for a set of important psycholinguistic variables. However some studies suggest that analysis of discourse may be better than naming tasks for assessing everyday word-finding difficulties in elderly adults (Schmitter-Edgecombe et al. (2000). Several psycholinguistic variables are known to affect word retrieval on both normal and pathological populations among which Age of Acquisition (henceforth AoA): words acquired earlier are easier and faster to process than words acquired later (Bates et al., 2001; Hodgson & Ellis, 1998; Lymperopoulo et al., 2006). This variable has so far received little attention in the Alzheimer’s population although it has been proposed as a possible early marker of the disease (Forbes-McKay, et al., 2005). Twenty participants diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease and twenty healthy controls matched for age, sex, level of education and socioeconomic status participated in our study. Spontaneous speech data were elicited by asking participants about biographical details. Any silence exceeding 200 ms was coded as a silent pause. Filled pauses, vocalic lengthenings and hesitations were also measured. These different dysfluencies were used to identify words prone to retrieval difficulty. For each text, a number of problematic words were identified, and a set of the same number of unproblematic words was randomly selected. 49 native French-speaking adults rated AoA on a 7-grade scale for the two word lists. In addition the frequency of each word was computed using the Lexique Database (New et al., 2004). Results reveal that problematic and non-problematic words do not significantly differ in frequency. Similarly no effect of frequency is observed between the two groups of participants. Turning to AoA, we find a group effect: problematic words produced by patients are acquired significantly later than the ones produced by healthy subjects. Similarly, in the Alzheimer’s group, problematic words are acquired significantly later than non-problematic words while the difference is not significant in the control group. We discuss our results in the framework of the retrogenesis hypothesis (Reisberg, Franssen, Auer, Akram & Kenowsky, 2002).

"Domaine(s)" et indice(s) Dewey

  • Psycholinguistique (401.9)
  • Troubles de la parole et du langage (troubles de la communication, de l'articulation ; orthophonie) (616.855)

Thème(s)

Intervenants, édition et diffusion

Intervenants

Fournisseur(s) de contenus : Bruno BASTARD, Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail SCPAM

Éditeur(s)

Diffusion

Document(s) annexe(s) - Age of acquisition affects word retrieval in spontaneous speech produced by patients with Alzheimer's disease / Frédérique Gayraud, Mélissa Barkat-Defradas

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AUTEUR(S)

  • Frédérique GAYRAUD
  • Melissa BARKAT-DEFRADAS

ÉDITION

Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail

EN SAVOIR PLUS

  • Identifiant de la fiche
    11511
  • Identifiant
    oai:canal-u.fr:11511
  • Schéma de la métadonnée
  • Entrepôt d'origine
    Canal-U
  • Date de publication
    22-06-2012