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2008 Extravaganza ADULT LANGUAGE EVIDENCE BASED PRACTICE GROUP

2008 Extravaganza ADULT LANGUAGE EVIDENCE BASED PRACTICE GROUP. Anika Roseby and Kate Schuj Group Co- Leaders with Lyndsey Nickels Academic Member. Clinical Question . Last year the Group completed a CAT on repetition as a treatment for word retrieval problems in aphasia.

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2008 Extravaganza ADULT LANGUAGE EVIDENCE BASED PRACTICE GROUP

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  1. 2008 ExtravaganzaADULT LANGUAGEEVIDENCE BASED PRACTICE GROUP Anika Roseby and Kate Schuj Group Co- Leaders with Lyndsey Nickels Academic Member

  2. Clinical Question • Last year the Group completed a CAT on repetition as a treatment for word retrieval problems in aphasia. • This lead to a new question…

  3. Question • “How and in what circumstances does orthographic cueing as therapy improve later spoken word retrieval in aphasia?”

  4. CAPping the Articles • 16 possible articles were found • Only 5 actually answered our clinical question and were included in our CAT • Some articles were not included because we couldn’t be sure that orthographic cueing alone assisted verbal naming (combination of cueing types used e.g. semantic or repetition).

  5. Exploring the Question.. • How does Orthographic Cueing work? • Why does it work? • Who does it work for? • Are the effects lasting? • Is there more than one way that orthographic cueing works?

  6. Approaches to rehabilitation:Restoration vs. compensation • Restoration • Improving the functioning of defective processes • Re-teaching of missing information, rules or procedures (or regaining retrieval of that information)

  7. Approaches to rehabilitation:Restoration vs. compensation • Compensation • Teaching a different way to perform the same function – using intact skills within the same cognitive domain • Teaching a way to compensate for the lost function using different skills.

  8. Cueing, Facilitation, Therapy K kangaroo

  9. Cueing, Facilitation, Therapy ….later “k” (spoken by SP) kangaroo

  10. Cueing, Facilitation, Therapy “k” “k” “k” “k” kangaroo “k” “k” “k” “k” “k”

  11. Use of orthography to facilitate retrieval of phonological form • most beneficial when written naming is less impaired than spoken naming: • Someone else cueing – priming for that item only • Self-cueing – generalises and compensatory

  12. How does orthographic cueing work? Two methods we discuss: • Generating phonemic cues from the initial letter • Using direct orthographic route

  13. Method 1: Generating phonemic cues from the initial letterNickels (1992) TC 1. Spoken naming 2. Written naming  3. Convert letters to sounds  dog

  14. d Generating phonemic cues from the initial letterNickels (1992) retaught letter-sound correspondences 1. Spoken naming 2. Visualise written word  3. Sound out initial letter &cue word production  dog dog

  15. This means…. • This improved TC’s spoken naming to almost the same level as his written naming. • He used this spontaneously in conversation. • Could be used for any word he was trying to retrieve (and was) • (only fails for words with irregular initial letters e.g. onion, Cinderella)

  16. Who will this work with? Phonologically-mediated self-cueing (e.g.; Nickels, 1992) • Requires access to the written form when the spoken form is unavailable • Requiresphonological cueability • Requires an ability to convert letters into sounds Can use a computer cueing aid to do the conversion Can be retaught

  17. Using a computer to generate phonemic cues from the initial letterBest et al. (1997)  • 1. Spoken naming d   2. Visualise first letter  3. Press letter  /d/ 4. Computer produces phoneme  dog 5. Cue word production 

  18. Generating phonemic cues from the initial letter – who? If they arephonemically cueable  They may be able to use a computer to generate the cues If they can (or be taught to) convert letters to sounds  They may be able to generate their own phonological cues

  19. Method 2: Self-generated orthographic cues • When spoken naming • IF individuals can identify initial letter  • They may be ableto use direct orthographic cueing (without needing to convert letters into phonemes)

  20. How does direct orthographic cueing work? K Print Orthographic Input Lexicon knife kick king etc Lexical Semantics Phonological Output Lexicon Orthographic Output Lexicon Knife kick king etc Knife knife Point to “K” Visualise K Writing “knife” Speech

  21. Cueing aid reorganising the naming system: JOW Best et al, 1997 • A direct orthographic cueing mechanism • Substantial and long-lasting effects of treatment • Improvement in treated and untreated items • Treatment drew attention to the relationship between orthography and phonology

  22. CAT Clinical bottom line: • The use of orthography to facilitate retrieval of phonological form is most beneficial when written naming is less impaired than spoken naming. • Using orthographic cues in therapy can lead to lasting improvements in naming treated items (just like repetition in our last CAT). Remember …. Treatment tasks can work in different ways for different people

  23. Acknowledgements • All the Adult Language EBP group members for all their hard work, dedication and contributions • Lyndsey Nickels, our academic link; whose expertise has been invaluable!

  24. References Basso A, Marangolo P, Piras F, Galuzzi C (2001) Acquisition of new "words" in normal subjects: A suggestion for the treatment of anomia. Brain and Language. Vol. 77(1), 45-59. Best W, Herbert R, Hickin J, Osborne F, Howard D.(2002) Phonological and orthographic facilitation of word-retrieval in aphasia: Immediate and delayed effects. Aphasiology, Volume 16 Issue 1 & 2 January, pages 151-168 Best W, Howard D, Bruce C, Gatehouse C. (1997) Cueing the Words: A Single Case Study of Treatments for Anomia. Neuropsychological Rehabilitation 7 (2) 105-141 Nickels,Lyndsey, (1992), The Autocue? Self-generated Phonemic Cues in the Treatment of a Disorder of Reading and Naming. Cognitive Neuropsychology, 9 (2) 155-182 Lorenz, A, Nickels, L .( 2007), Orthographic cueing in anomic aphasia: How does it work? Aphasiology. Vol 21(6-8) Aug, 670-686.

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