Dysphasic Speech Responses to Visual Word Stimuli
- 1 June 1959
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Speech Language Hearing Association in Journal of Speech and Hearing Research
- Vol. 2 (2) , 152-160
- https://doi.org/10.1044/jshr.0202.152
Abstract
Speech behavior of 31 dysphasic subjects was investigated in terms of parts of speech, level of abstraction, length and frequency of occurrence in written English usage. Dysphasics make more errors on adjectives than on either verbs or nouns, more on long words than on short, more on words of both high and low abstraction level than on those of medium level, and more on words occurring infrequently in the language than on those occurring frequently.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Psycholinguistic Study Of Aphasia: A Revision Of The Concept Of AnomiaJournal of Speech and Hearing Disorders, 1956
- Abstract And Concrete Behavior Of Dysphasic Patients And Normal SubjectsJournal of Speech and Hearing Disorders, 1955
- An Empirical Investigation Of The Loss Of Spelling Ability In DysphasicsJournal of Speech and Hearing Disorders, 1954
- Auditory Impairment In Aphasia: Significance And Retraining TechniquesJournal of Speech and Hearing Disorders, 1953
- Aphasics: Observations and Tentative ConclusionsJournal of Speech Disorders, 1947
- A Phonetic Approach to the Problem of Perception in a Case of Wernicke’s AphasiaJournal of Speech Disorders, 1944
- Aphasia from the Viewpoint of a Speech PathologistJournal of Speech Disorders, 1944