Friday, October 24, 2014

In Stroke Rehab, Skip the ABC's - Bilingual Aphasia

People with damaged speech recover faster by focusing on harder words
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/in-stroke-rehab-skip-the-abcs/
When we learn, we usually begin with the basics and work our way up, mastering our do-re-mi’s before launching into an aria. But when people have difficulty speaking and understanding language after a stroke—a condition called aphasia—they seem to improve faster when they start at a harder level.
Speech researcher Swathi Kiran of Boston University works with bilingual aphasia patients to help them relearn words. She has found that when pa­tients practice the language they speak less fluently, their vocabulary grows in both languages. But when the patients study words in the language they are more comfortable in, only that language improves.
Although Kiran has not yet pub­lished a study on her bilingual patients, her observation is in line with her ear­lier, published papers and those of other researchers. These studies show that aphasics who speak only one language also benefit from more diffi­cult practice. When aphasics study unusual words in a category—such as “parsnip” and “rutabaga” when relearning vegetable names—they also improve their fluency with common words in that category (“pea” and “carrot”). Likewise, practicing complex sentences helps aphasics handle simple ones.

More behind the paywall.

A more detailed paper here;
Aphasia Therapy in the Age of Globalization: Cross-Linguistic Therapy Effects in Bilingual Aphasia

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