Detalles del Artículo
Detalles del Artículo

< Ant.
Sig. >
 
Título Artículo Action and object processing in brain-injured speakers of Chinese. Artículo de Revista
Parte de Neuropsychology
Vol. 25, n. 6 (Nov. 2011)
Pagina(s) 792-805
Idioma Inglés;
Materia(s) Lesiones cerebrales; Lenguaje;
Nota(s) Autores: Arévalo, Analia L.; Lu, Ching-Ching; Huang, Lydia B.-Y.; Bates, Elizabeth A.; Dronkers, Nina F.
Resumen To see whether action and object processing across different tasks and modalities differs in brain-injured speakers of Chinese with varying fluency and lesion locations within the left hemisphere. Method: Words and pictures representing actions and objects were presented to a group of 33 participants whose native and/or dominant language was Mandarin Chinese: 23 patients with left-hemisphere lesions due to stroke and 10 language-, age- and education-matched healthy control participants. A set of 120 stimulus items was presented to each participant in three different forms: as black and white line drawings (for picture-naming), as written words (for reading) and as aurally presented words (for word repetition). Patients were divided into groups for two separate analyses: Analysis 1 divided and compared patients based on fluency (Fluent vs. Nonfluent) and Analysis 2 compared patients based on lesion location (Anterior vs. Posterior). Results: Both analyses yielded similar results: Fluent, Nonfluent, Anterior, and Posterior patients all produced significantly more errors when processing action (M = 0.73, SD = 0.45) relative to object (M = 0.79, SD = 0.41) stimuli, and this effect was strongest in the picture-naming task. Conclusions: As in our previous study with English-speaking participants using the same experimental design (Arévalo et al., 2007, Arévalo, Moineau, Saygin, Ludy, & Bates, 2005), we did not find evidence for a double-dissociation in action and object processing between groups with different lesion and fluency profiles. These combined data bring us closer to a more informed view of action/object processing in the brain in both healthy and brain-injured individuals.
Objetos Asociados Ver libro electrónico