4.4 Article

Semantic network activation facilitates oral word reading in chronic aphasia

Journal

BRAIN AND LANGUAGE
Volume 233, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.bandl.2022.105164

Keywords

Aphasia; Stroke; fMRI; Semantics; Phonology; Reorganization

Funding

  1. NIH National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke [RO1 NS033576, RO1 DC003681, RO3 NS054958]
  2. American Heart Association [13PRE16510003]
  3. National Center for Medical Rehabilitation Research (NIH/NICHD) [K12 HD093427]
  4. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences [KL2 TR001438]

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People with aphasia often have partial impairments in specific tasks, which provides insights into how damaged language networks function. A study found that stroke participants with phonological damage recruited the semantic system for successful word reading. In contrast, residual phonological networks showed no difference in activation between correct and incorrect trials on the word reading task.
People with aphasia often show partial impairments on a given task. This trial-to-trial variability offers a potential window into understanding how damaged language networks function. We test the hypothesis that successful word reading in participants with phonological system damage reflects semantic system recruitment. Residual semantic and phonological networks were defined with fMRI in 21 stroke participants with phonological damage using semantic- and rhyme-matching tasks. Participants performed an oral word reading task, and activation was compared between correct and incorrect trials within the semantic and phonological networks. The results showed a significant interaction between hemisphere, network activation, and reading success. Activation in the left hemisphere semantic network was higher when participants successfully read words. Residual phonological regions showed no difference in activation between correct and incorrect trials on the word reading task. The results provide evidence that semantic processing supports successful phonological retrieval in participants with phonological impairment.

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