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This study investigated the effects of two associative learning tasks on aphasic subjects' labeling of novel symbols. It was designed to determine if aphasic subjects need to develop their own associations for word-symbols pairs (personalized cueing) to obtain the long-term labeling benefits observed in prior research or if comparable results are obtained when "ready-made" associations are used during training (provided cueing). The results showed that the two cueing techniques were equal in their ability to elicit correct responses from the subjects. The results also demonstrated the long-term effectiveness of both cueing procedures on the subjects' labeling accuracy up to 30 days after training was discontinued.
KEY WORDS: aphasia, associative learning, verbal labeling, brain damaged, adulthood
Submitted on May 23, 1994
Accepted on March 20, 1995
This article has been cited by other articles:
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R. C. Marshall and D. B. Freed The Personalized Cueing Method: From the Laboratory to the Clinic Am J Speech Lang Pathol, May 1, 2006; 15(2): 103 - 111. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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