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Dysfunctional Tissue Correlates of Unrelated Naming Errors in Acute Left Hemisphere Stroke

Authors :
Delaney M. Ubellacker
Alexandra Walker
Erin L. Meier
Shannon M. Sheppard
Argye E. Hillis
Kristina Ruch
Catherine R. Kelly
Emily Goldberg
Emilia Vitti
Source :
Lang Cogn Neurosci
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Most naming error lesion-symptom mapping (LSM) studies have focused on semantic and/or phonological errors. Anomic individuals also produce unrelated word errors, which may be linked to semantic or modality-independent lexical deficits. To investigate the neural underpinnings of rarely-studied unrelated errors, we conducted LSM analyses in 100 individuals hospitalized with a left hemisphere stroke who completed imaging protocols and language assessments. We used least absolute shrinkage and selection operator regression to capture relationships between naming errors and dysfunctional brain tissue metrics (regional damage or hypoperfusion in vascular territories) in two groups: participants with and without impaired single-word auditory comprehension. Hypoperfusion—particularly within the parietal lobe—was an important error predictor, especially for the unimpaired group. In both groups, higher unrelated error proportions were associated with primarily ventral stream damage, the language route critical for processing meaning. Nonetheless, brain metrics implicated in unrelated errors were distinct from semantic error correlates.

Details

ISSN :
23273798
Volume :
37
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Language, cognition and neuroscience
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9b93b39baa73eb424601b13d574dc6b8