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Title: Treating verb retrieval a clinical study


1
Treating verb retrieval a clinical study
  • S. Edwards1,2 K. Tucker1
  • 1University of Reading, UK
  • 2 University of Limerick, Ireland
  • Seminar
  • University of Reading 2006

2
Verbs are necessary for sentences
3
  • Meaning
  • Phonological form
  • Syntactic information
  • 1. the permitted and obligatory phrasal
    structure that can / may follow or precede
    the verb
  • 2. distribution within a sentence
  • 3. tense and agreement.

4
Verbs and aphasia
  • Verbs may be more vulnerable than nouns in
    Brocas aphasia
  • (Berndt et al 1997 Miceli et al 1984 Zingeser
    Berndt 1990 Semenza, Luzzatti, and Carabelli
    1997)
  • although not always (Berndt Haendiges 2000
    Caramazza Hillis 1991)

5
And in some cases of fluent aphasia, verbs are
more vulnerable (Berndt et al 1997)
  • Further verb production may be atypical.
  • For example
  • diversity of verb types may be reduced in fluent
    aphasia (eg. Edwards and Bastiaanse 1998)

6
Treatment of verbs and sentence production
  • Creating sentences may be aided by providing the
    verb (Berndt et al 1997 Webster, Morris and
    Franklin 2003)
  • Or a sentence frame may elicit verb (Webster et
    al 2003)

7
  • 15 years of sentence treatment
  • Jones 1986 Thompson et al 1993 Thompson et al
    1997 Ballard Thompson 1999 Thompson et al
    2003 Webster, Morris and Franklin 2003
  • Evidence of a bi-directional effect
  • Treatment of sentence structure associated with
    greater facility with verbs (Weinrich, Shelton,
    Cox and McCall 1997 Thompson, Shapiro, Kiran and
    Sobecks 2003)
  • Treatment of verbs influences sentence structure
    (Mitchum and Berndt 1994 Raymer and Ellsworth
    2002 Schneider and Thompson 2003)

8
  • However..
  • work on improving sentence structure and verb
    retrieval has almost exclusively been with
    agrammatic subjects
  • although studies now beginning to look at fluent
    or mixed aphasia (Murray, Ballard and Karcher
    2004)

9
Experimental vs clinical trials
  • Constraints of clinical practice
  • Resources
  • Subject selection
  • Subject / funders expectations
  • Ethics
  • Replication

10
Experimental vs clinical trials cont.
  • Differing aims and design
  • Clinical looking for improvement in language
    behaviour that is sustained ( Howard, Best, et al
    Jane Marshall et al 1997)
  • Experimental looking for evidence that the
    independent variable brings about change
    (Thompson , Shapiro et al 2003).

11
Experimental vs clinical trials cont
  • Design phase of treatment / non-treatment
  • Choice of dependant variable.
  • External validity
  • experimental strength / communicative application

12
The study
  • A clinically based trial in a typical NHS setting
  • Regular treatment focused on verb retrieval in
    fluent aphasia
  • Aimed to increase proportion of well formed
    sentences and to answer theoretical questions

13
Questions
  • Can verb retrieval be facilitated by systematic
    and repeated exercises in fluent aphasia?
  • Can speed as well as accuracy of retrieval be
    improved?
  • Will enhanced verb retrieval generalise to
    untreated verbs i.e. response generalisation?
  • Will improved verb retrieval in controlled tasks
    be associated with a greater proportion of
    well-formed sentences i.e. stimulus
    generalisation (Thompson in press)?

14
  • Can improvement be maintained?
  • What effect does the type of assessment task have
    on performance?

15
  • Response generalisation changes in untrained
    language behaviour. For example a set of words
    is trained and improvement is found in the
    untrained set.
  • Stimulus generalisation changes in untrained
    language conditions. For example when
    improvement in word retrieval impacts on ability
    to retrieve words in narratives. (Thompson in
    press)

16
Our project
  • Multiple single subject design using within
    subject comparisons to examine the effect of
    treatment on verb retrieval in fluent aphasia.
  • Subjects with fluent aphasia (BDAE 2001)
  • Regular and systematic treatment backed up by
    home practice over 2 - 4 months

17
Subjects
  • 3 subjects were recruited via local SLTs.
  • All were diagnosed as having fluent aphasia (BDAE
    2001)
  • Aphasia resulted from left-sided CVA
  • At least 6 months post-onset.

18
Table 1. Participant details
19
Procedures
  • Base line 3 assessments pre-treatment over a 3
    month period.
  • treatment 2 x week 4 months (JD CB)
  • 2 x week 3 months (JR)
  • Follow-up testing
  • Subjects JR CB
  • immediately after treatment and 3 months post
    treatment
  • Subject JD
  • immediately after treatment and 2 months post
    treatment

20
Assessments
  • Initial sessions
  • Shortened BDAE (Goodglass, Kaplan and Baresi
    2001)
  • All testing times
  • Production and comprehension of verbs
  • Production and comprehension of sentences
  • (VAST Bastiaanse, Edwards and Rispen 2002)
  • 3. Object and action naming (Druks and Masterson
    2000)
  • 4. Continuous speech samples

21
  • (VAST Bastiaanse, Edwards and Rispen 2002)
  • Production and comprehension of verbs
  • naming single action pictures (N40
  • selecting 1 of 4 action pictures (N40)
  • Production and comprehension of sentences
  • creating a sentence picture (N20)
  • Selecting 1 of 4 pictures (N40)

22
  • 3. Object (162) and action naming (100) black
    and white line drawings
  • (Druks and Masterson 2000)

23
Control tasks
  • non-word repetition
  • syllable length repetition
  • spelling to dictation
  • (PALPA Kay, Lesser and Coltheart 1992)

24
Connected speech data
  • Story retell
  • Aesops tales (BDAE)
  • Picture description (Cookie theft BDAE)
  • Conversational data (aided by a video news clip)

25
Treatment
  • Structured and repeated exercises to elicit
    verbs drilling.
  • Procedures
  • sentence completion
  • definition
  • picture naming (Berndt et al 2002)

26
Verbs for treatment
  • 50 action pictures set A treatment
  • 50 action pictures set B control
  • Sets controlled for frequency, AOA, familiarity
    and argument structure.

27
Trialing materials and procedures
  • All sentence frames for completion and definition
    questions were trialled on 20 non-aphasic
    speakers.
  • Materials were adjusted until gt 85 agreement for
    each target verb (McCann 2005 Kemmerer and
    Tranel 2000)

28
Order verbs were presented in the treatment tasks
  • transitive verbs (kick)
  • unergative (sing)
  • optional transitive / unergative (eat)
  • optional transitive / unaccusative (melt)
  • (Shapiro et al 1987 Thompson et al 1995 Lee and
    Thompson 2002)

29
Tasks for elicitation
  • Built in cueing in the tasks
  • Sentence completion (syntactic semantic)
  • Definition (semantic)
  • Picture naming

30
Error free learning
  • Additional cueing used to promote accurate
    responses
  • semantic knot your shoe laces
  • initial phoneme /t/
  • part word /tei/
  • multiple choice with semantic and phonemic
    distractors
  • repeat target tie

31
Task requirements
  • Accurate and prompt response adjusted for each
    individual based on maximum time taken to respond
    in VAST.
  • Any form of the target verb was accepted
  • Needed to achieve 85 in two out of three trials
    of same task before moving to next level max. 2
    weeks

32
Feedback
  • Scores recorded on-line and participants were
    aware of their performances.
  • Changes in scores were discussed.
  • Aimed for a collaborative working sessions.

33
Home practice
  • Explicit work sheets for home-practice.
  • Ten minutes twice a day, every day, except
    treatment days when one practice was required.
  • Exercises were repeated even when 100 achieved.
  • Practice partner attended sessions when new task
    was introduced.

34
Results
  • Subjects had greater difficulty naming actions
    than objects (p lt0.05).
  • at each time point for JD and JR
  • at T2 and T4 for CB.

35
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36
  • Was verb retrieval facilitated by systematic
    treatment?
  • Verb retrieval was facilitated.

37
Table 2. verbs correct before and after
treatment
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  • Can speed as well as accuracy of retrieval be
    improved?
  • Verbs were retrieved faster after treatment

40
Table 3. Time taken to name verb list A
41
  • Will enhanced verb retrieval generalise to
    untreated verbs?
  • There was some limited generalisation to
    untreated verbs for all subjects, the trend for
    improvement continued in the follow-up stage.

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  • There was no significant change in performance on
    the control tasks.
  • Some evidence of response generalisation but only
    retrieving verbs as single words.

44
  • Was there an improvement in well-formed sentences
    associated with facilitated verb retrieval ?
  • Scores on the sentence production task (VAST)
    improved for all subjects. CB maintained and
    continued to improve.

45
Table 4. Sentence production (VAST)
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  • There was some limited evidence of improvement in
    continuous speech
  • evidence of stimulus generalisation

48
Continuous speech
49
  • On the Cookie Theft
  • JD showed an increase in well-formed sentences at
    T4
  • CB did not show an improvement
  • JR showed an increased proportion of well-formed
    sentences in final follow-up assessment T5

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52
JR Cookie theft
53
  • Was there an increase only in the verbs used in
    treatment?
  • No but.
  • No significant generalisation across verb sets
    for 3 subjects but more verbs in conversation
    data for JR

54
  • Can improvement be maintained?
  • Maintenance varied across subjects but also
    across measures

55
Table 5. Maintenance of improved performance
56
Task effect
  • Different types of connected speech samples
    showed different effects (Berndt et al 2002)
  • For JR improvement was shown in the picture
    description (Cookie theft) and the conversational
    data

57
JR Cookie theft
58
JR story re-tell
59
JR conversation sample
60
  • For JD there was improvement at T4 in the picture
    description and the conversational data
    improvement not maintained in follow-up testing.
  • Performance fell for the story re-tell.

61
  • For CB NS increase in the number of grammatical
    utterances only in the story re-tell. There were
    lower or equal proportions of grammatical
    utterances in picture description and
    conversational data.

62
Conclusions and discussion
  • Systematic treatment can be effective
  • significantly more verbs produced after
    treatment and there was an increase in
    grammatical utterances in some tasks
  • Although there was some diminishing of
    performance post treatment for 2 participants
    (also found in L2 learning)

63
  • Regular, systematic treatment was effective for
    treated verbs as measured at T4 for all
    participants

64
  • Will improved verb retrieval in controlled tasks
    be associated with a greater proportion of
    well-formed sentences in connected speech?
  • Limited success.
  • Not all subjects improved in all continuous
    speech conditions.

65
Implications for clinical practice
  • Increased scores dont equate with improvement
  • Difficulty of establishing base lines
  • Connected speech data are tricky

66
on the other hand
  • Deficit-based treatment can be effective
  • Effects may last
  • Deficit-based treatment can be offered as part of
    the intervention package

67
  • Transfer of agrammatic treatment to fluent
    aphasia may be effective.

68
  • The end
  • Thank you

69
Acknowledgements
  • University of Reading Research Endowment Fund
  • University of Reading Health Research Fellowship
  • Wokingham Primary Care NHS Trust
  • Phillip Mannion
  • Debbie Begent
  • Lizet Van Ewijk
  • Clare McCann

70
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Verbs list A list B Vast
where the verb occurs also in list A or B, is
indicated in brackets (9 from A, 9 from B!)
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