Hearing & Speech Sciences Theses and Dissertations

Permanent URI for this collectionhttp://hdl.handle.net/1903/2776

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    AN INVESTIGATION OF NEURAL MECHANISMS UNDERLYING VERB MORPHOLOGY DEFICITS IN APHASIA
    (2019) Pifer, Madeline R; Faroqi-Shah, Yasmeen; Hearing and Speech Sciences; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
    Agrammatic aphasia is an acquired language disorder characterized by slow, non-fluent speech that include primarily content words. It is well-documented that people with agrammatism (PWA) have difficulty with production of verbs and verb morphology, but it is unknown whether these deficits occur at the single word-level, or are the result of a sentence-level impairment. The first aim of this paper is to determine the linguistic level that verb morphology impairments exist at by using magnetoencephalography (MEG) scanning to analyze neural response to two language tasks (one word-level, and one sentence-level). It has also been demonstrated that PWA benefit from a morphosemantic intervention for verb morphology deficits, but it is unknown if this therapy induces neuroplastic changes in the brain. The second aim of this paper is to determine whether or not neuroplastic changes occur after treatment, and explore the neural mechanisms by which this improvement occurs.
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    The Effects of Aging on Lexical Access
    (2011) Tower, Kathryn Rachel; Faroqi-Shah, Yasmeen; Hearing and Speech Sciences; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
    As the U.S. population ages, the need to understand how language changes with age becomes more important. Difficulty with word retrieval is one of the most notable changes as individuals age (Burke & Shafto, 2004); however, theoretical models of aging disagree on the cause. Two prominent theories are the impaired lexical access hypothesis and the general slowing theory. The present study aimed to explore these two ideas using magnetoencephalography (MEG). A young adult group (N=17, mean age 20.6 years) and an older adult group (N=9, mean age =64.6 years) participated in a lexical decision task using verbs. MEG latency data corresponding to lexical access found no between-group difference. Behavioral response times were significantly slower in the older group. Results point either to the idea that linguistic difficulties experienced by older individuals are the result of reduced abilities in phonological or motor processing, or that while lexical representations remain intact, the connections between them become less efficient with age.