Detalles del Artículo
Detalles del Artículo

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Título Artículo Visual short-term store can compensate for a defective phonological short-term store in patients with apraxia of speech.Artículo de Revista
Parte de Neuropsychology
Vol. 27 n.6 (Nov. 2013)
Pagina(s) 628-641
Autor(es) Silveri, Maria Caterina (Autor)
Baldonero, Eleonora (Autor)
Idioma Inglés;
Resumen Objective: The aim of the study was to investigate whether, within the phonological short-term memory (STM) system, speech articulation disorders primarily due to cortical damage are associated with deficits in the phonological recoding of visual¿verbal material, and whether the visual short-term store (STS) can compensate for inefficient access to the phonological STS, as suggested in previous reports. Method: Two patients (AE and TM) with apraxia of speech due to atrophic cerebral damage were administered a battery of tasks devised to explore the organization of the phonological STM. Results: AE¿s span was normal and TM¿s span was markedly reduced. Phonological similarity and word-length effects: Both patients showed the effects in visual presentation; the effect was less evident in verbal presentation. This suggests a phonological STS disorder and preserved rehearsal/phonological recoding, consistently with involvement of the left parietal regions, which was documented by the MRI in both patients. Unexpectedly, TM had a longer span for similar than for dissimilar words in visually presented stimuli. Silent phonology (on written material): At variance with controls, stress assignment improved during unattended speech both in AE and TM, while in both patients and controls a detrimental effect of unattended speech was documented in the initial sound task. Conclusions: To account for this unusual pattern of results, we hypothesized that whenever possible, AE and TM adopt the strategy that takes advantage of the visual STM store to compensate for a defective phonological STS.
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