Auditory Vigilance in Aphasic Individuals: Detecting Nonlinguistic Stimuli with Full or Divided Attention

Previous research (LaPointe & Erickson, 1991) has shown that aphasic individuals have difficulty, relative to control subjects, in monitoring for spoken words while performing a secondary task. This finding may indicate that aphasics have fundamental deficits in attention or that their linguistic deficits are simply exacerbated by dividing attention. Twenty subjects, 10 nonfluent aphasic and 10 nonaphasic adults, listened to two 10-min series of nonlinguistic acoustic stimuli across conditions of focused and divided attention. Subjects tried to identify target sounds interspersed with nontarget sounds. As in prior research, aphasic subjects performed less accurately on the auditory vigilance task during the divided attention condition, relative to the undivided attention condition and to control subjects. The findings suggest that deficient cognitive processing, intertwined with linguistic deficit, may underlie auditory comprehension deficits in aphasia and may help explain performance variation within aphasic individuals across tasks.

[1]  J. Lachman,et al.  Cognitive Psychology and Information Processing: An Introduction , 1979 .

[2]  A. Kertesz The Western Aphasia Battery , 1982 .

[3]  D. Kleinbaum,et al.  Applied Regression Analysis and Other Multivariate Methods , 1978 .

[4]  E. Kaplan,et al.  Variations in aphasic language behaviors. , 1988, The Journal of speech and hearing disorders.

[5]  ● Pytorch,et al.  Attention! , 1998, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[6]  J. Pearce Clinical Management of Neurogenic Communicative Disorders , 1986 .

[7]  L. Lapointe,et al.  Auditory vigilance during divided task attention in aphasic individuals , 1991 .

[8]  N L Foster,et al.  Divided attention, as measured by dichotic speech performance, in dementia of the Alzheimer type. , 1989, Archives of neurology.

[9]  Evelyn J White,et al.  Language Intervention Strategies in Adult Aphasia , 1984 .

[10]  N. Kirsch,et al.  Assessment of distractibility in auditory comprehension after traumatic brain injury. , 1988, Brain injury.

[11]  A. Caramazza Some aspects of language processing revealed through the analysis of acquired aphasia: the lexical system. , 1988, Annual review of neuroscience.

[12]  Roy K. Sedge Clinical Management of Neurogenic Communicative Disorders , 1979 .

[13]  Walter Schneider,et al.  Controlled and automatic human information processing: II. Perceptual learning, automatic attending and a general theory. , 1977 .

[14]  D. Kahneman,et al.  Attention and Effort , 1973 .

[15]  M. McNeil,et al.  Toward an Integrative Information-Processing Structure of Auditory Comprehension and Processing in Adult Aphasia , 1986 .

[16]  J. Wepman Aphasia therapy: a new look. , 1972, The Journal of speech and hearing disorders.

[17]  Katharine H. Odell,et al.  Toward the Integration of Resource Allocation into a General Theory of Aphasia , 1991 .

[18]  P. Milenkovic,et al.  An Investigation of Attention Allocation Deficits in Aphasia , 1993, Brain and Language.

[19]  W. N. Dember,et al.  Effects of Task Type and Stimulus Heterogeneity on the Event Rate Function in Sustained Attention , 1987, Human factors.