Background: Verbal fluency tasks are routinely used in clinical assessment and research studies of aphasia. People with aphasia produce fewer items in verbal fluency tasks. It remains unclear if their output is limited solely by their lexical difficulties and/or has a basis in their executive control abilities. Recent research has illustrated that detailed characterization of verbal fluency performance using temporal characteristics of words retrieved, clustering and switching, and pause durations, along with separate measures of executive control stands to inform our understanding of the lexical and cognitive underpinnings of verbal fluency in aphasia. Aims: To determine the locus of the verbal fluency difficulties in aphasia, we compared semantic and letter fluency trials between people with aphasia and healthy control participants using a wide range of variables to capture the performance between the two groups. The groups were also tested on separate measures of executive control to determine the relationship amongst these tasks and fluency performance. Methods & Procedures: Semantic (animal) and letter (F, A, S) fluency data for 60s trials were collected from 14 people with aphasia (PWA) and 24 healthy adult controls (HC). Variables, such as number of correct responses, clustering and switching analyses, were performed along with temporal measures of the retrieved words (response latencies) and pause durations. Participants performed executive control tasks to measure inhibitory control, mental-set shifting and memory span. Outcomes & Results: Compared with HC, PWA produced fewer correct responses, showed greater difficulty with the letter fluency condition, were slower in getting started with the trials, showed slower retrieval times as noted in within- and between-cluster pause durations, and switched less often. Despite these retrieval difficulties, PWA showed a similar decline in the rate of recall to HC, and had similar cluster size. Executive control measures correlated primarily with the letter fluency variables: mostly for PWA and in one instance for HC. Conclusions & Implications: Poorer performance for PWA is a combination of difficulties in both the lexical and executive components of the verbal fluency task. Our findings highlight the importance of detailed characterization of fluency performance in deciphering the underlying mechanism of retrieval difficulties in aphasia, and illustrate the importance of using letter fluency trials to tap into executive control processes.
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London South Bank Univ, Div Psychol, Sch Appl Sci, 103 Borough Rd, London SE1 0AA, EnglandLondon South Bank Univ, Div Psychol, Sch Appl Sci, 103 Borough Rd, London SE1 0AA, England
Smith-Spark, James H.
Henry, Lucy A.
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City Univ London, Language & Commun Sci, London, EnglandLondon South Bank Univ, Div Psychol, Sch Appl Sci, 103 Borough Rd, London SE1 0AA, England
Henry, Lucy A.
Messer, David J.
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Open Univ, Fac Educ & Language Studies, Milton Keynes, Bucks, EnglandLondon South Bank Univ, Div Psychol, Sch Appl Sci, 103 Borough Rd, London SE1 0AA, England
Messer, David J.
Ziecik, Adam P.
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London South Bank Univ, Div Psychol, Sch Appl Sci, 103 Borough Rd, London SE1 0AA, EnglandLondon South Bank Univ, Div Psychol, Sch Appl Sci, 103 Borough Rd, London SE1 0AA, England
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Univ Missouri, Dept Commun Sci & Disorders, 301 Lewis Hall, Columbia, MO 65211 USAUniv Missouri, Dept Commun Sci & Disorders, 301 Lewis Hall, Columbia, MO 65211 USA
Botezatu, Mona Roxana
Mirman, Daniel
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Univ Alabama Birmingham, Dept Psychol, Birmingham, AL 35294 USA
Moss Rehabil Res Inst, Elkins Pk, PA USAUniv Missouri, Dept Commun Sci & Disorders, 301 Lewis Hall, Columbia, MO 65211 USA