Word retrieval in picture descriptions produced by individuals with Alzheimer’s disease

ABSTRACT What can tests of single-word production tell us about word retrieval in connected speech? We examined this question in 20 people with Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and in 20 cognitively intact individuals. All participants completed tasks of picture naming and semantic fluency and provided connected speech through picture descriptions. Picture descriptions were analyzed for total word output, percentages of content words, percentages of nouns, and percentages of pronouns out of all words, type–token ratio of all words and type–token ratio of nouns alone, mean frequency of all words and mean frequency of nouns alone, and mean word length. Individuals with AD performed worse than did cognitively intact individuals on the picture naming and semantic fluency tasks. They also produced a lower proportion of content words overall, a lower proportion of nouns, and a higher proportion of pronouns, as well as more frequent and shorter words on picture descriptions. Group differences in total word output and type–token ratios did not reach significance. Correlations between scores on tasks of single-word retrieval and measures of retrieval in picture descriptions emerged in the AD group but not in the control group. Scores on a picture naming task were associated with difficulties in word retrieval in connected speech in AD, while scores on a task of semantic verbal fluency were less useful in predicting measures of retrieval in context in this population.

[1]  I. T. Draper THE ASSESSMENT OF APHASIA AND RELATED DISORDERS , 1973 .

[2]  S. Folstein,et al.  "Mini-mental state". A practical method for grading the cognitive state of patients for the clinician. , 1975, Journal of psychiatric research.

[3]  M. Albert,et al.  Empty speech in Alzheimer's disease and fluent aphasia. , 1985, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[4]  R. Harald Baayen,et al.  How Variable May a Constant be? Measures of Lexical Richness in Perspective , 1998, Comput. Humanit..

[5]  Maryellen C. MacDonald,et al.  Why Do Alzheimer Patients Have Difficulty with Pronouns? Working Memory, Semantics, and Reference in Comprehension and Production in Alzheimer's Disease , 1999, Brain and Language.

[6]  T. Bschor,et al.  Spontaneous Speech of Patients With Dementia of the Alzheimer Type and Mild Cognitive Impairment , 2001, International Psychogeriatrics.

[7]  Y. Levy,et al.  Morphology in picture descriptions provided by persons with Alzheimer's disease. , 2003, Journal of speech, language, and hearing research : JSLHR.

[8]  P. Verhaeghen Aging and vocabulary scores: a meta-analysis. , 2003, Psychology and aging.

[9]  J. Henry,et al.  Verbal fluency performance in dementia of the Alzheimer’s type: a meta-analysis , 2004, Neuropsychologia.

[10]  David Malvern,et al.  Developmental trends in lexical diversity , 2004 .

[11]  J. Hodges,et al.  The effects of very early Alzheimer's disease on the characteristics of writing by a renowned author. , 2004, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[12]  J. Hodges,et al.  Semantic feature knowledge and picture naming in dementia of Alzheimer’s type: A new approach , 2005, Brain and Language.

[13]  K. Forbes-McKay,et al.  Detecting subtle spontaneous language decline in early Alzheimer’s disease with a picture description task , 2005, Neurological Sciences.

[14]  G. Kavé,et al.  Phonemic Fluency, Semantic Fluency, and Difference Scores: Normative Data for Adult Hebrew Speakers , 2005, Journal of clinical and experimental neuropsychology.

[15]  F. Cuetos,et al.  The picture-naming task in the analysis of cognitive deterioration in Alzheimer's disease , 2005 .

[16]  G. Kavé,et al.  Standardization and norms for a Hebrew naming test , 2005, Brain and Language.

[17]  Adrian Ivanoiu,et al.  Semantic memory in Alzheimer's disease and the frontotemporal dementias: a longitudinal study of 236 patients. , 2006, Neuropsychology.

[18]  J. Masterson,et al.  Selective Naming (and Comprehension) Deficits in Alzheimer's Disease? , 2007, Cortex.

[19]  Loraine K. Obler,et al.  Change in lexical retrieval skills in adulthood , 2007 .

[20]  Murray Grossman,et al.  The decline of narrative discourse in Alzheimer’s disease , 2007, Brain and Language.

[21]  F. Cendes,et al.  Semantic error patterns on the Boston Naming Test in normal aging, amnestic mild cognitive impairment, and mild Alzheimer's disease: is there semantic disruption? , 2008, Neuropsychology.

[22]  Justin M. Aronoff,et al.  A common mechanism in verb and noun naming deficits in Alzheimer’s patients , 2009, Brain and Language.

[23]  G. Kavé,et al.  The association between age and the frequency of nouns selected for production. , 2009, Psychology and aging.

[24]  Boyd H. Davis,et al.  Examining Pauses in Alzheimer's Discourse , 2009, American journal of Alzheimer's disease and other dementias.

[25]  T. V. Dijk,et al.  Cognition and discourse production in Alzheimer's disease: using informative prompts , 2009 .

[26]  Asaf Gilboa,et al.  The rise and fall of word retrieval across the lifespan. , 2010, Psychology and aging.

[27]  J. Hodges,et al.  The Cambridge Semantic Memory Test Battery: Detection of semantic deficits in semantic dementia and Alzheimer's disease , 2010, Neurocase.

[28]  M. Folstein,et al.  Clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease: Report of the NINCDS—ADRDA Work Group under the auspices of Department of Health and Human Services Task Force on Alzheimer's Disease , 2011, Neurology.

[29]  M. Barkat-Defradas,et al.  Syntactic and lexical context of pauses and hesitations in the discourse of Alzheimer patients and healthy elderly subjects , 2011, Clinical linguistics & phonetics.

[30]  B. Desgranges,et al.  When the zebra loses its stripes: Semantic priming in early Alzheimer's disease and semantic dementia , 2011, Cortex.

[31]  M. Crossley,et al.  Clustering and Switching Strategies During Verbal Fluency Performance Differentiate Alzheimer's Disease and Healthy Aging , 2011, Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society.

[32]  Anat Ben-Simon Yoav Cohen,et al.  The Hebrew Language Project: Automated Essay Scoring & Readability Analysis , 2011 .

[33]  E. Agranov,et al.  Which verbal fluency measure is most useful in demonstrating executive deficits after traumatic brain injury? , 2011, Journal of clinical and experimental neuropsychology.

[34]  E. Arroyo-Anlló,et al.  Verbal fluency in Alzheimer's disease and Aphasia , 2012 .

[35]  A. Ellis,et al.  A fresh look at the predictors of naming accuracy and errors in Alzheimer's disease. , 2012, Journal of neuropsychology.

[36]  G. Kavé,et al.  Age-related differences in word-retrieval but not in meaning generation , 2012, Neuropsychology, development, and cognition. Section B, Aging, neuropsychology and cognition.

[37]  D. Salmon,et al.  The Multilingual Naming Test in Alzheimer's Disease: Clues to the Origin of Naming Impairments , 2013, Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society.

[38]  M. Miozzo,et al.  Perseverations in Alzheimer's disease: Memory slips? , 2013, Cortex.

[39]  P. Wolf,et al.  Lexical retrieval in discourse: An early indicator of Alzheimer’s dementia , 2013, Clinical linguistics & phonetics.

[40]  Peter Garrard,et al.  Semantic processing in connected speech at a uniformly early stage of autopsy-confirmed Alzheimer's disease. , 2013, Neuropsychology.

[41]  P. Garrard,et al.  Connected speech as a marker of disease progression in autopsy-proven Alzheimer’s disease , 2013, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[42]  Juliana Onofre DE Lira,et al.  Analysis of word number and content in discourse of patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease , 2014, Dementia & neuropsychologia.

[43]  H. Arai,et al.  Clinical Diagnosis , 1890, Edinburgh Medical Journal.

[44]  M. Schmitter-Edgecombe,et al.  Analysis of verbal fluency ability in Alzheimer's disease: the role of clustering, switching and semantic proximities. , 2014, Archives of clinical neuropsychology : the official journal of the National Academy of Neuropsychologists.

[45]  G. Kavé,et al.  Lifespan development of phonemic and semantic fluency: Universal increase, differential decrease , 2015, Journal of clinical and experimental neuropsychology.

[46]  Visar Berisha,et al.  Tracking discourse complexity preceding Alzheimer's disease diagnosis: a case study comparing the press conferences of Presidents Ronald Reagan and George Herbert Walker Bush. , 2015, Journal of Alzheimer's disease : JAD.

[47]  Kathleen C. Fraser,et al.  Linguistic Features Identify Alzheimer's Disease in Narrative Speech. , 2015, Journal of Alzheimer's disease : JAD.