The curious case of the Cat Rescue: can picture narrative description inform visuospatial processing in aphasia?

BackgroundExamining discourse production during picture description performance holds great promise for understanding the nature of and the interconnectedness between visuospatial processing and language production in aphasia – a language disorder following acquired brain damage. There is a paucity...

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Main Authors: Sarah Grace Dalton, Javad Anjum, Davida Fromm, Brian MacWhinney
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2025-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
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Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fnhum.2025.1574453/full
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author Sarah Grace Dalton
Javad Anjum
Davida Fromm
Brian MacWhinney
author_facet Sarah Grace Dalton
Javad Anjum
Davida Fromm
Brian MacWhinney
author_sort Sarah Grace Dalton
collection DOAJ
description BackgroundExamining discourse production during picture description performance holds great promise for understanding the nature of and the interconnectedness between visuospatial processing and language production in aphasia – a language disorder following acquired brain damage. There is a paucity of studies concurrently investigating the two processes in discourse production tasks, despite their potential clinical utility in aphasia rehabilitation. In the current study, we compared the core lexicon (CoreLex) word production performance of PWA and matched healthy control participants (HCP) along the dimensions of typicality of words (e.g., the words most frequently used by a normative sample of healthy controls), CoreLex word production timing, as well as the indirect visuospatial measures of order and spatial location of CoreLex word productions across the four quadrants of the Cat Rescue picture in a story telling task.MethodsA total of 319 transcripts from HCP and 400 transcripts from PWA, all of whom completed the picture description task of the Cat Rescue were drawn from the AphasiaBank database—the largest repository of aphasic discourse samples in the world. For each transcript, CoreLex scores and timing data of word production – including the elapsed time to produce each core lexicon content item and the first core lexicon content word in each quadrant—were indexed across the four quadrants of the Cat Rescue picture using the CLAN (Computerized Language ANalysis) program.ResultsCoreLex analysis revealed that PWA were significantly slower compared to HCP in producing the first CoreLex word for each quadrant of the picture. PWA also demonstrated delayed CoreLex word production times across all the four quadrants, as well as lower rates of certain CoreLex word production compared to HCP. Aphasia severity was inversely related to the latency and accuracy of CoreLex production.ConclusionStudy findings offer preliminary evidence for the clinical utility of integrating concurrent visuospatial processing and language production tasks as part of discourse assessment in PWA. Future implications for further expanding and refining discourse-based visuospatial processing assessment tools in aphasia rehabilitation are discussed.
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spelling doaj-art-4a4e34bb4d154158804417af7a76603e2025-08-20T02:25:33ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Human Neuroscience1662-51612025-05-011910.3389/fnhum.2025.15744531574453The curious case of the Cat Rescue: can picture narrative description inform visuospatial processing in aphasia?Sarah Grace Dalton0Javad Anjum1Davida Fromm2Brian MacWhinney3Department of Communication Sciences and Special Education, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, United StatesDepartment of Communication Sciences and Special Education, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, United StatesDepartment of Psychology, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, United StatesDepartment of Psychology, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, United StatesBackgroundExamining discourse production during picture description performance holds great promise for understanding the nature of and the interconnectedness between visuospatial processing and language production in aphasia – a language disorder following acquired brain damage. There is a paucity of studies concurrently investigating the two processes in discourse production tasks, despite their potential clinical utility in aphasia rehabilitation. In the current study, we compared the core lexicon (CoreLex) word production performance of PWA and matched healthy control participants (HCP) along the dimensions of typicality of words (e.g., the words most frequently used by a normative sample of healthy controls), CoreLex word production timing, as well as the indirect visuospatial measures of order and spatial location of CoreLex word productions across the four quadrants of the Cat Rescue picture in a story telling task.MethodsA total of 319 transcripts from HCP and 400 transcripts from PWA, all of whom completed the picture description task of the Cat Rescue were drawn from the AphasiaBank database—the largest repository of aphasic discourse samples in the world. For each transcript, CoreLex scores and timing data of word production – including the elapsed time to produce each core lexicon content item and the first core lexicon content word in each quadrant—were indexed across the four quadrants of the Cat Rescue picture using the CLAN (Computerized Language ANalysis) program.ResultsCoreLex analysis revealed that PWA were significantly slower compared to HCP in producing the first CoreLex word for each quadrant of the picture. PWA also demonstrated delayed CoreLex word production times across all the four quadrants, as well as lower rates of certain CoreLex word production compared to HCP. Aphasia severity was inversely related to the latency and accuracy of CoreLex production.ConclusionStudy findings offer preliminary evidence for the clinical utility of integrating concurrent visuospatial processing and language production tasks as part of discourse assessment in PWA. Future implications for further expanding and refining discourse-based visuospatial processing assessment tools in aphasia rehabilitation are discussed.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fnhum.2025.1574453/fullaphasiadiscoursevisuospatial processingcore lexiconaphasia severity
spellingShingle Sarah Grace Dalton
Javad Anjum
Davida Fromm
Brian MacWhinney
The curious case of the Cat Rescue: can picture narrative description inform visuospatial processing in aphasia?
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
aphasia
discourse
visuospatial processing
core lexicon
aphasia severity
title The curious case of the Cat Rescue: can picture narrative description inform visuospatial processing in aphasia?
title_full The curious case of the Cat Rescue: can picture narrative description inform visuospatial processing in aphasia?
title_fullStr The curious case of the Cat Rescue: can picture narrative description inform visuospatial processing in aphasia?
title_full_unstemmed The curious case of the Cat Rescue: can picture narrative description inform visuospatial processing in aphasia?
title_short The curious case of the Cat Rescue: can picture narrative description inform visuospatial processing in aphasia?
title_sort curious case of the cat rescue can picture narrative description inform visuospatial processing in aphasia
topic aphasia
discourse
visuospatial processing
core lexicon
aphasia severity
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fnhum.2025.1574453/full
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