Rehabilitation In Bilingual Aphasia: Evidence For Within- And Between-Language Generalization

Date

2013-05

Authors

Kiran, Swathi
Sandberg, Chaleece
Gray, Teresa
Ascenso, Elsa
Kester, Ellen

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Abstract

Purpose: The goal of this study was to examine if there was a principled way to understand the nature of rehabilitation in bilingual aphasia such that patterns of acquisition and generalization are predictable and logical. Method: Seventeen Spanish-English bilingual individuals with aphasia participated in the experiment. For each participant, three sets of stimuli were developed for each language: (a) English Set 1, (b) English Set 2 (semantically related to each item in English Set 1), (c) English Set 3 (unrelated control items), (d) Spanish Set 1 (translations of English Set 1), (e) Spanish Set 2 (translations of English Set 2; semantically related to each item in Spanish Set 1), and (f) Spanish Set 3 (translations of English Set 3; unrelated control items). A single-subject experimental multiple baseline design across participants was implemented. Treatment was conducted in 1 language, but generalization to within- and between-language untrained items was examined. Results: Treatment for naming on Set 1 items resulted in significant improvement (i.e., effect size >4.0) on the trained items in 14/17 participants. Of the 14 participants who showed improvement, within-language generalization to semantically related items was observed in 10 participants. Between-language generalization to the translations of trained items was observed in 5 participants, and between-language generalization to the translations of the untrained semantically related items was observed in 6 participants. Conclusion: The results of this study demonstrated within- and between-language patterns that were variable across participants. These differences are indicative of the interplay between facilitation (generalization) and inhibition.

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Citation

Kiran, S., Sandberg, C., Gray, T., Ascenso, E., Kester, E. Rehabilitation In Bilingual Aphasia: Evidence For Within- And Between-Language Generalization. American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, Vol. 22, No. 2. (May., 2013). DOI: 10.1044/1058-0360(2013/12-0085)