Computerized approaches to communication retraining after stroke.

被引:1
作者
Ansel B.M. [1 ]
Weinrich M. [1 ]
机构
[1] National Center for Medical Rehabilitation Research, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health, 2A03, Room, 6100 Executive Boulevard, Bethesda, 20892-7510, MD
关键词
Aphasia; Functional Communication; Alternative Communication; Aphasic Patient; Communication Disorder;
D O I
10.1007/s11883-002-0008-4
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) strategies traditionally have been designed for individuals for whom oral speech is not a viable option. Common clinical practice has expanded AAC use to a tool for cognitive retraining or remediation. Although technologic developments offer the potential for vastly improved communication and inclusion for some individuals with severe communication disorders, technology alone does not result in successful communication. Although AAC interventions have become increasingly common across the age range, the research base underlying the design of AAC technology, intervention strategies, and treatment potential across communication disorders remains quite limited. To move beyond the traditional application of AAC strategies as a communication modality for persons with severe motor disorders to applications for persons with cognitive/linguistic disorders, three interrelated areas of research requiring further investigations are discussed. These include the following: use of AAC as a research tool to provide theoretical insights into the nature of normal and impaired language and cognition; development of AAC strategies as treatment tools to facilitate language recovery and use (production and comprehension); and studies that evaluate the efficacy of applying AAC strategies as communication modalities for individuals with acquired cognitive/linguistic communication disorders.
引用
收藏
页码:291 / 295
页数:4
相关论文
共 71 条
  • [1] McNeil MR(1983)Aphasia: neurologic considerations Topics Language Disord 3 1-19
  • [2] Caramazza A(2001)Agrammatic Broca’s aphasia is not associated with a single pattern of comprehension performance Brain Lang 76 158-184
  • [3] Capitani E(2001)Broca’s aphasia is associated with a single pattern of comprehension performance: A reply Brain Lang 76 185-192
  • [4] Rey A(1997)Aphasic sentence comprehension as a resource deficit: a computational approach Brain Lang 59 76-120
  • [5] Berndt RS(1990)Augmentative and alternative communication: does it have a future in aphasia rehabilitation? Aphasiology 4 321-338
  • [6] Drai D(1982)Observing functional communication of aphasic adults J Speech Hearing Disord 47 50-56
  • [7] Grodzinsky Y(1987)Reapportioning time for aphasia rehabilitation: a point of view Aphasiology 1 59-73
  • [8] Zurif E(1989)A comprehensive augmentative communication system for an adult with Broca’s aphasia Augmentative and Alternative Commun 5 55-61
  • [9] Haarmann HJ(1997)Generalization from single sentence to multisentence production in severely aphasic patients Brain Lang 58 327-352
  • [10] Just MA(1995)Aphasia and augmentative communication: does Minspeak have a role to play? Commun Matter 9 5-7