Title: Speech production
1Speech production
- What is anomia?
- Types of anomia
- Cognitive models
- Category specific naming deficits?
- Summary
2Speech production
- We have all experienced having the idea of some
familiar object but being unable to call up its
name. - The moment some other person uses the word it is
recognised. - The "Tip of the tongue" phenomenon illustrates
the normality of pathology.
3Word form problems (selection and production)
- (1) Tip of the Tongue effects are accompanied by
a feeling of knowing some knowledge of sound
structure is preserved and phonemic cueing (i.e.
starts with) can help word retrieval. - (2) Malapropisms describe an error that is a real
word sounding like the target - Thats a colourful flower derangement
- (3) Neologisms are nonsense words that are
produced in place of the target - She cannot see without her nexicles.
4Anomia
- Patient BP (Weekes Robinson, 1997)
- guitar -gt cello swan -gt duck onion -gt vegetable
- An inability to translate ideas into symbols.
- An extreme form of tip-of-the-tongue.
- Types of anomia
- Semantic
- Phonological
- Optic?
5semantic
phonemic
dog
house
6A four legged animal with a long mane and a tail
dog
horse
7HAT
8Brocas area
Brocas area
Motor cortex
Perisylvian region
Prefrontal cortex
Wernickes area
9 Frontal lobe
Motor strip
Transcranial Magentic Stimulation TMS
Temporal lobe
10Ashcroft
- "The most powerful realization I had during the
episode ... was a dissociation between the
thought and the word or phrase that expresses the
thought. The subjective experience consisted of
knowing with complete certainty the idea or
concept that I was trying to express and being
completely unable to find and utter the word that
expressed the idea or concept. ... The experience
was not one of being unable to articulate a word
currently held in consciousness. Instead, it was
one of being fully aware of the target idea yet
totally unable to accomplish what normally feels
like a single act of finding-and-saying the word."
11Symptom or syndrome?
- As a symptom or neurological sign.
- Predominant symptom is word finding difficulty
and this is found in a majority of patients with
damage to the brain. - Confrontation naming is selectively impaired
whereas other aspects of language and memory can
be intact.
12Syndrome
- Difficulties with word finding in spontaneous
speech and confrontation naming tasks. - Seen in most aphasic patients and in conditions
ranging from dementia to Parkinson's disease. - Associated with left hemisphere damage in the
temporal lobe (perisylvian region).
13Optic aphasia
- Patient JF was impaired when naming visually
presented objects but could define them from
their spoken names or when given the object to
touch (Beauvois et al., 1973, 1982, 1985). - He could mime the use of the objects so this was
not agnosia (i.e. knew what object was). - C.f. Tactile aphasia e.g., RG could not name
objects by touch but could name visually
presented objects and pantomime their use
(suggesting that he knew what the object was).
14Optic aphasia
- Beauvois, et al, (1978) argued for disconnection
between a separate modality specific action
memory system and a verbal memory system. - Dissociable knowledge systems one for actions
one for objects (also Warrington Shallice, 88). - Note that an alternative explanation given by
Riddoch, Humphreys, Coltheart Funnell, 88).
15Frontal?
Temporal?
Patient RG
Patient JF
Ellis and Young Chapter 2 page 57
16Semantic anomia
- Naming problems with poor comprehension of object
names from speech or from print. - Semantic errors in naming saying "daffodil" for
tulip (semantic paraphasia) and comprehension
pointing to a daffodil after hearing the word
tulip. - Performance not improved by phonemic cueing i.e.
the word begins with t. - There is a general problem with knowing the
meaning of a word from spoken or written input.
17Patient JCU
- Patient JCU (Howard Orchard-Lisle, 1984) is a
severe 'global' aphasic who was extremely poor at
picture naming (only 3 correct). - She could be induced to make semantic errors by
giving her the first sound of an associate e.g.,
picture of a tiger "l" -gt "lion". - When shown a picture and asked "Is it an X?
(e.g., picture of a tiger and "Is it a lion?")
she would accepted 56 of closely related words
as correct, but only 2 of unrelated names.
18Phonological/lexical anomia
- Naming problems in the context of very good
comprehension of object names (e.g. BP). - Semantic errors in naming only
- Naming saying cap" for hat (paraphasia).
- Comprehension will point to a picture of a hat
after hearing/reading the word hat. - Phonological errors may also occur as patient
searches for the correct name (e.g., nexicles). - Patient immediately recognises the target name
upon hearing the tester produce it.
19Patient EST
- Patient EST (Kay Ellis, 1987) could sort
pictures into semantic categories and match
pictures with spoken words (comprehension OK). - When given pictures to name he sometimes gave a
similar sounding (incorrect) response. - Performance was improved by phonemic cueing and
he knew the sound structure of word. - General problem in selecting or producing the
appropriate sound.
20A cognitive framework for naming
articulation of phonemes
horse
21Points of breakdown
- 1. Object perception / identification Optic.
- 2. Object 'comprehension' Semantic anomia.
- 3. Word retrieval Phonological/lexical anomia.
- 4. Articulation of phonemes cause phonological
errors e.g., tulip -gt "dulop . . .tupil
dyspraxia or dysarthria.
22Exclusionary testing for anomia
- Confrontation naming tasks
- e.g., Boston naming test Graded naming test
(McKenna Warrington, 1983). - Semantic knowledge
- e.g., Spoken word-picture matching (PALPA)
Pyramids and Palm Trees Test (Howard and
Patterson, 1996). - Verbal fluency (FAS test) semantic category
fluency. - Effects of psycholinguistic variables
- word frequency (spoken and written)
- age-of-acquisition
- imageability
- number of letters/phonemes/syllables.
23A cognitive framework for naming
dog
articulation of phonemes
24Agnosia?
- It is important to consider the possibility of
pre-semantic (visual) deficits when assessing a
patients naming difficulties using pictures. - If the deficit is pre-semantic then patient
should be able to perform well when tested using
other modalities (written words, spoken words,
etc.). - The patient should also have normal speech
production other than for naming objects e.g.,
normal spontaneous speech naming to definition
verbal and category fluency.
25A cognitive framework for naming
A four legged animal with a long mane and a tail
dog
articulation of phonemes
26Tell me everything that is happening in this
picture
27hat
28Semantic impairment
- If the semantic system is impaired then both
comprehension and production of single words
should be compromised. - Examples of patients with this form of anomia
- Category-specific patients (e.g., JBR Warrington
Shallice, 1984). - Some cerebro-vascular accident (CVA) patients
(Chertkow, 1997 Howard Orchard Lisle, 1984). - Patients with dementia (Parris Weekes, 2001).
29Thompson-Schill et al (1999) Neuropsychologia
- Living Nonliving Example cases
- Animate Inanimate
- Animal Fruit Artefacts
- x x v (Warrington Shallice,1984).
- v v x (Sheridan Humphreys, 1993).
- x v v (Hart Gordon, 1992).
- v x x (Hillis Caramazza, 1991).
- v x v (Hart, Berndt, Caramazza 1985)
- x v x Not reported
30Picture-picture matching task
31Severe damage to (verbal) semantic system
- Gianotti, et al (1986) reported patients who had
no knowledge of the meaning of a word. - In speech production, errors were semantic in
nature e.g., calling a hat a cap. - Warrington Shallice (1984) patient JBR had
problems comprehending pictures and names of
living things and problems producing names
spontaneouslycategory specificity.
32Milder damage to (verbal) semantic system
- Patient JCU had a deficit in comprehension of
spoken words but some semantic information was
clearly preserved because she could often provide
the correct answer ("tiger to a picture of a
tiger) if given a phonemic cue (/t/). - Even if given a wrong phonemic cue (e.g., the
sound /l/ to a picture of a tiger) she produced a
semantically plausible answer (e.g., lion) rather
than an inappropriate answer (e.g., lemon)
indicating some semantic processing.
33A cognitive framework for naming
A four legged animal with a long mane and a tail
dog
articulation of phonemes
34Phonological lexicon impairment
- Comprehension should be normal.
- If make semantic errors but should be able to
reject them on a forced choice task. - Phonemic cueing should improve naming.
- Phoneme level should be normal so should see good
repetition and reading aloud. - Example cases Patient EE (Howard, 1995)
Patients JS and GM (Lambon Ralph et al., 2000)
Patient MOS (Lambon Ralph, 1999).
35Selection or production?
- Ellis and Young (1996) do not distinguish between
selection and production but other authors do
(McCarthy Warrington, 1990). - They distinguish between deficits in lexical
selection and deficits in lexical production. - Best evidence for two separate stages is AF,
(Hier Mohr 1977) who could write words he
couldnt name therefore selection of the word is
preserved but spoken production is not.
36Category specific anomia
- Nouns versus verbs
- Naming actions (verbs) intact (Robinson et al
1999) - Naming objects (nouns) intact (Cappa et al 1998).
- Caramazza (1991) has argued that nouns and verbs
are represented as discrete forms in output
systems. - Proper names versus common names
- Names of faces impaired but names of objects
intact. - Geographical terms and proper names are
selectively preserved in some patients (McNeil et
al, 1994). - Why? The names are constrained and refer to a
unit of meaning whereas common nouns refer to
types.
37A cognitive framework for naming
verbs
nouns
articulation of phonemes
38Dissociation between nouns and verbs
- Selective deficits in producing verbs relative to
nouns in speech are associated with
left-hemisphere pre-frontal lesions (BA 45 again)
whereas difficulty in producing nouns relative to
verbs is associated with left temporal damage. - Issue Do these impairments arise because of
differences in the way grammatical categories of
words are organized in the brain or because of
differences in the neural representation of
actions and objects (i.e. semantic properties)?
39Syntax or semantics?
- Caramazza argues that lexical-grammatical
knowledge has a neuroanatomical and also a
functional basis that is separate from the
semantic features of a words representation. - Morphological transformations of verbs (e.g., he
sings -gt they sing) and nouns (e.g. the songs -gt
the song) cannot result from damage to semantics
as they are found in the production of
pseudo-words that function as verbs (e.g. he
wugs-gtthey wug) or nouns (the wugs-gtthe wug).
40Parris and Weekes (2001)
- Report an anomic patient RS with dementia
affecting his access to knowledge about objects
from visual, verbal and tactile input. - RS displays preserved knowledge and naming of
actions but an effect of instrumentality on
action naming i.e. actions that depict an actor
using a tool are worse than actions depicting an
actor performing an action without a tool. - Shows that the relationship between actions and
objects affects action naming in dementia.
41dog
Instrumental x
With objects v
Non-instrumental v
42A cognitive framework for naming
Action Knowledge v
Object Knowledge x
Verbs v
Nouns x
articulation of phonemes
43verbs
nouns
tools
44Dynamic aphasia
- Patient ANG had a malignant meningioma in BA45.
- Patient ANG has normal repetition, naming, and
reading but spontaneous speech is impaired. - BA45 is involved in the selection of competing
alternatives for response output (Shallice). - Dogs have a good sense of _______v
- Helen reached down to dust the _______x
- Haylings Test
- Robinson et al (1998) argued ANG had damage to a
module for selection of competing verbal
responses.
45PET study of normal word generation
- Wise et al, (1991) reported an early PET study
- 1. Rest.
- 2. Perception of non words.
- 3. Noun/noun semantic category comparisons
(e.g., fruit -apple..furniture-shirt). - 4. Verb/noun semantic category comparisons
(e.g., eat apple.knit-spectacles). - 5. Verb generation similar to verbal fluency
test Ss presented with a noun (e.g. flower) and
had to generate as many associated verbs as
possible.
46Subtractive methodology
- 2 minus 1 prelexical phonetic processing.
- 3 minus 2 post phonetic semantic processing of
nouns. - 4 minus 2 post phonetic semantic processing of
verbs. - 5 minus 4 regions involved in the retrieval of
verbs from memory. - The subjects were silent in all conditions in
order to avoid activation due to vocalisation.
47Results
- In the verb generation condition there was
activity in the posterior left inferior frontal
gyrus (Brocas area), posterior left middle
frontal gyrus and the supplementary motor area
(SMA). - If left SMA is lesioned, speech output is lost
though comprehension is preserved in patients. - The posterior left middle frontal gyrus (BA 45)
is associated with dynamic aphasia (c.f. Robinson
et al 1998) and is also involved when several
verbs must be generated for each noun rather like
the requirements for spontaneous speech.
48Brain and behaviour
- These results show that in the normal brain,
there is a close correspondence between the brain
regions involved in the deliberate, voluntary
generation of words, and the brain regions
involved in Brocas aphasia and transcortical
motor (dynamic) aphasia. - The most likely organisation of the lexical
network is an interactive arrangement of brain
regions serving spoken word production. - This would allow for a modular pattern.
49Summary
- Anomia is referred to as a neurological sign in
neuropsychology because this deficit is often
observed in patients with brain damage. - Studies of anomia have enabled us to develop
cognitive models of naming and to identify the
necessary cognitive processes. - Studies of category specific anomia have
contributed to the identification of brain
regions used for noun and verb processing using
neuroimaging techniques.
50Primary reading sources
- Parkin Chapter 7.
- Chapter 5 (2 and 9) - Ellis, A. Young, A.
(1996) Human cognitive neuropsychology. Hove
Psychology Press. - McCarthy, R. Warrington, E.K. (1990) Cognitive
Neuropsychology A Clinical Introduction. London
Academic Press. Chapter 6 "Auditory Word
Comprehension Chapter 7 "Word Retrieval".
51References
- Cappa S et al (1998). Object and action naming in
Alzheimer's disease and fronto-temporal dementia.
Neurology, 50(2) 351-355. - Caramazza A Hillis A. (1991). Lexical
organization of nouns and verbs in the brain.
Nature (346), 269. - Lambon Ralph M. et al (2000). Classical anomia A
neuropsychological perspective on speech
production. Neuropsychologia, (38), 186-202. - Parris, B Weekes, B. (in press). Action naming
in dementia. Neurocase.
52Patient BP
53 54A cognitive framework for naming
lemma
Written word output lexicon
dog
articulation of phonemes
HORSE
55Levelts model of naming
Language based
Not language based
ANG
ToM, Actions, Knowledge of world WM, Discourse
model
Pre-verbal message
Conceptual preparation
Grammatical encoding
lemmas mental lexicon
Surface structure
Morpho-phonological encoding
syllabary
phonetic encoding
articulation
overt speech
56verbs
nouns
tools
57Phoneme level
- Comprehension should be normal.
- Errors are mainly phonological but individual
phonemes can be pronounced correctly. - Phonological errors similar to spoonerisms
- He received a blushing crow
- Phoneme level is used for repetition, naming,
speech production and reading aloud -gt so should
be impaired for all language tasks. - Example cases RD (Ellis, et al., 1983) LT
(Shallice, Rumiati, Zadini, 2000).
58Post phoneme level problems
- Pure articulation problem (speech musculature).
- Comprehension, speech output lexicon and phoneme
level intact but cannot programme speech into an
articulate output (dyspraxic). - Affects all forms of speech output.
- Errors halting speech and poorly articulated
phonemes (for all phonemes and word types). - Specific to language apraxia for speech.
- General oral apraxia.
59(No Transcript)
60(No Transcript)
61verbs
Nouns
62Phenomenology
- Aschcroft - an academic interested in aphasia.
- A personal case history of transient anomia
Brain and Language, 1991, 44, 47-57. - 45-minute anomic episode.
- Caused by disrupted boodflow (later treated by
operation).
63Category specific agnosia
- Warrington and Shallice (1984) reported a patient
called JBR who following an acute lesion to the
left temporal lobe (as a result of herpes
encephalitis) had a selective deficit when asked
to name pictures from just one semantic category
living things.
64Artefacts
- By contrast JBR was able to name non-living
objects very well including those with low
frequency names such as accordion that were
matched for the number of letters in the name and
the visual complexity of the object.
65Double dissociation
- Patient YOT (Warrington McCarthy, 1987) was
worse at naming nonliving things but was very
good at naming large, nonmanipulable objects. - Suggests that the organisation of semantic memory
might break down into taxonomic categories or
reflect different properties of living
(visual-sensory) and nonliving (functional)
items. - LA (Gainotti Silveri, 1996) was worse at living
than nonliving things and was worse at giving
visual information compared with functional
information about both living and nonliving
things.
66Categories of knowledge about objects?
- Multiple semantic systems (Warrington/Shallice)
- Patients who have no access to object knowledge
from verbal input but can name pictures
successfully. - Modality specific (visual and verbal) meaning
systems. - Verbal semantic and visual semantic systems?
- Unitary semantic system (Caramazza/Coltheart)
- Different types of object depend on different
types of encoding e.g., living things require
featural encoding. - Knowledge only appears to fractionate because of
differences in task difficulty (verbal visual
tasks).
67Confounding factor accounts
- Confounding factors for verbal/visual knowledge
- Pictures afford more information than words.
- Agnosia causes apperceptive visual problems.
- Modality of input impairments cannot be excluded.
- Confounding factors for living/nonliving things
- Visual familiarity, similarity, complexity
(Funnell, 2000) - Animals are more structurally similar to each
other than artefacts (Humphreys,et al, 1995
Funnell, 2000). - Monkeys discriminate nonliving things better than
living things (Gaffan Heywood, 1993).
68Differential-weighting hypothesis
- Category specific effects on recognition result
from a correlated factor such as the ratio of
visual versus functional features of an object - living more visual and nonliving more functional.
- Farah McClelland (1991) report a dictionary
study showing the ratio of visual to functional
features for living things and nonliving things - living things was 7.71 and nonliving was 1.41.
69Farah and McClelland (1991)
- A single system with functional and visual
features. - Model was trained to associate functional and
visual features differently for living and
non-living things. - Two different inputs (verbal and visual).
- Model lesioned to either visual or functional
units - A) Visual unitsgtliving things Functional
unitsgtnonliving things. - B) Visual unitsgtimpaired functional knowledge of
living things. - Loss of both visual and functional knowledge
about a living thing can occur in a unitary
single system that only distinguishes between
visual and functional attributes.
70Thompson-Schill et al., (1999)
- Interactive modality hypothesis predicts that
questions about visual and functional semantic
knowledge for living things will engage visual
semantic processing. - Questions about the visual semantic attributes of
nonliving things will also engage visual semantic
processing. - Scaned the fusiform gyrus while asking questions
about visual and functional properties of living
and nonliving objects.
71Thompson-Schill et al., (1999)
- There was increased activity in the ventral
(What) pathway - middle temporal gyrus - for all
conditions suggesting a common system. - But questions about the visual semantic
attributes of living and nonliving things engaged
the fusiform gyrus differentially an
interaction. - Visual semantic retrieval may depend on both
modality of input and the category of retrieval. - See Caramazza (2000) for a reply.
72Funnell (2000)
- Reported a patient with dementia (NA) who showed
a category specific naming deficit - not due to any of the confounding factors (visual
complexity, similarity, familiarity). - not due to semantic problems.
- resulted from an early visual problem possibly
due to the access of stored structural
descriptions. - conclusion is that category specific deficits can
be a consequence of visual impairments in agnosia
and do not necessarily reflect categories of
knowledge.