![]() ![]() RELEASE Collaborators Brady MC, Ali M, VandenBerg K, Williams LJ, Williams LR, Abo M, Becker F, Bowen A, Brandenburg C, Breitenstein C, Bruehl S, Copland DA, Cranfill TB, Pietro-Bachmann MD, Enderby P, Fillingham J, Lucia Galli F, Gandolfi M, Glize B, Godecke E, Hawkins N, Hilari K, Hinckley J, Horton S, Howard D, Jaecks P, Jefferies E, Jesus LM, Kambanaros M, Kyoung Kang E, Khedr EM, Pak-Hin Kong A, Kukkonen T, Laganaro M, Lambon Ralph MA, Charlotte Laska A, Leemann B, Leff AP, Lima RR, Lorenz A, MacWhinney B, Shisler Marshall R, Mattioli F, Maviş İ, Meinzer M, Nilipour R, Noé E, Paik NJ, Palmer R, Papathanasiou I, Patricio B, Pavão Martins I, Price C, Prizl Jakovac T, Rochon E, Rose ML, Rosso C, Rubi-Fessen I, Ruiter MB, Snell C, Stahl B, Szaflarski JP, Thomas SA, van de Sandt-Koenderman M, van der Meulen I, Visch-Brink E, Worrall L, Harris Wright H. Larger sample size studies are needed to further examine the influence of intensity on improvements in auditory comprehension. Group AR may be helpful in this area (Hawkins, 2006). Communication skills training may range from improving articulation to managing conversation. Pulls analytic targets into functional practice to address the use of strategies in real-world situations. Preliminary results suggest that some people with severe chronic aphasia can tolerate an intensive auditory comprehension treatment and demonstrate improvements in high-frequency, word-level response accuracy with large effect sizes suggesting generalization to untrained stimuli.Īn intensive auditory comprehension treatment protocol can contribute to improvements in response accuracy for some people with severe aphasia. Includes all areas of auditory comprehension. A high-frequency, word-picture verification treatment was administered 2 hr/day, 5 days/week for 4 weeks and required participants to match the spoken word of the examiner to a picture representing an object. This single-case ABA design study included 2 participants with chronic, severe auditory comprehension deficits secondary to stroke. Research questions: (a) Can people with severe aphasia tolerate an intensive comprehension treatment? (b) Does an intensive intervention increase auditory comprehension response accuracy of spoken high-frequency words? Our purpose was to examine the feasibility and influence of a high-intensity word-picture verification treatment on high-frequency, word response accuracy. ![]() Studies examining intensive rehabilitative treatments for severe single-word auditory comprehension impairments are needed. For example, prognosis for rehabilitation. Also, very few studies have investigated recovery beyond the first year post-stroke. Severe auditory comprehension deficits associated with aphasia can impact all aspects of a persons life. Severe auditory comprehension impairments secondary to aphasia can adversely influence rehabilitative outcomes and quality of life. Auditory comprehension is often negatively impacted in stroke-related aphasia, but prior recovery studies of aphasia have typically focused on broad measures, such as overall aphasia severity. ![]()
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