New word learning in people with aphasia
Citation
Kelly, H. and Armstrong, L. (2009) ‘New word learning in people with aphasia’, Aphasiology, 23(12), pp. 1398–1417. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/02687030802289200.
Abstract
Background: The theory of speech and language therapy intervention for people with
aphasia is still under-articulated, and some people with aphasia respond better to
therapy than others. The reasons for individual variation in response to therapy have
not yet been fully established but may partially reflect a person with aphasia's ability to
utilise a range of cerebral mechanisms, such as re-accessing damaged neural pathways
and establishing new ones. Most current therapies aim to help the person with aphasia
access their previously available language abilities. New learning may offer an
alternative therapy approach. However, there is little evidence to date on the effect of
aphasia on a person's capability to learn new linguistic information.
Aim: To explore the new vocabulary learning potential of people with aphasia.
Methods & Procedures: Twelve participants, under the age of 65 years and with a range
of aphasia severity and personal backgrounds, were taught 20 novel words over four
consecutive days. Their learning of this new vocabulary was measured via a range of
single-word processing tasks based on the cognitive neuropsychological model. Ten
participants repeated the tasks a few days later to establish whether the new vocabulary
had been retained in long-term memory.
Outcomes & Results: All of the participants demonstrated some ability to learn the new
vocabulary (both novel word forms and novel word meanings), with scores ranging
from 15% to 99% on the various assessments. At the follow-up session, the ten
participants retained between 49% and 83% of their previous scores.
Conclusions: This study has important implications for aphasia rehabilitation as it has
shown that people with aphasia have the potential to learn new linguistic material, even in
the presence of severe language impairments. This capacity could be exploited in therapy.
Previously known words could be taught as new. Pre-therapy assessment of the person
with aphasia's learning capacity and style would promote individually-tailored learning
experiences and so, potentially, more effective therapy and better clinical outcomes.