A MAXIMUM-LIKELIHOOD PROCEDURE FOR THE ANALYSIS OF GROUP AND INDIVIDUAL DATA IN APHASIA RESEARCH

被引:22
作者
BATES, E
MCDONALD, J
MACWHINNEY, B
APPELBAUM, M
机构
[1] LOUISIANA STATE UNIV,BATON ROUGE,LA 70803
[2] CARNEGIE MELLON UNIV,PITTSBURGH,PA 15213
[3] VANDERBILT UNIV,NASHVILLE,TN 37240
关键词
D O I
10.1016/0093-934X(91)90126-L
中图分类号
R36 [病理学]; R76 [耳鼻咽喉科学];
学科分类号
100104 ; 100213 ;
摘要
The limitations inherent in group versus case studies appear to lie in a complementary distribution, underscoring the importance of combining both strategies within a single research program. However, this compromise approach requires analytic tools that permit us to combine and evaluate individual and group data in a common format. Maximum likelihood estimation (MLE) belongs to a family of procedures for determining goodness of fit. MLE can be used in conjunction with a linear or nonlinear model of the way that sources of information combine to determine a given behavioral outcome; such models can be used to estimate the distance between two groups, the degree to which an individual case deviates from a given empirically or theoretically defined group profile, and the degree to which one individual case resembles another. We offer a demonstration of how MLE can be used to evaluate group and individual profiles, in a cross-linguistic study of sentence comprehension in nonfluent aphasic speakers of English, Italian, and German. This includes a demonstration in which the MLE models for each language are "lesioned" to simulate several competing accounts of receptive agrammatism. © 1991.
引用
收藏
页码:231 / 265
页数:35
相关论文
共 53 条
[1]   ON CONSIDERATIONS OF METHOD AND THEORY GOVERNING THE USE OF CLINICAL CATEGORIES IN NEUROLINGUISTICS AND COGNITIVE NEUROPSYCHOLOGY - THE CASE AGAINST AGRAMMATISM [J].
BADECKER, W ;
CARAMAZZA, A .
COGNITION, 1985, 20 (02) :97-125
[2]   A FINAL BRIEF IN THE CASE AGAINST AGRAMMATISM - THE ROLE OF THEORY IN THE SELECTION OF DATA [J].
BADECKER, W ;
CARAMAZZA, A .
COGNITION, 1986, 24 (03) :277-282
[3]   INFLUENCE OF REHABILITATION ON LANGUAGE-SKILLS IN APHASIC PATIENTS - CONTROLLED-STUDY [J].
BASSO, A ;
CAPITANI, E ;
VIGNOLO, LA .
ARCHIVES OF NEUROLOGY, 1979, 36 (04) :190-196
[4]   FACTORS INFLUENCING TYPE AND SEVERITY OF APHASIA [J].
BASSO, A ;
CAPITANI, E ;
LAIACONA, M ;
LUZZATTI, C .
CORTEX, 1980, 16 (04) :631-636
[5]   COMPARATIVE APHASIOLOGY - A CROSS-LINGUISTIC APPROACH TO LANGUAGE BREAKDOWN [J].
BATES, E ;
WULFECK, B .
APHASIOLOGY, 1989, 3 (02) :111-142
[6]   COMPREHENSION IN APHASIA - A CROSS-LINGUISTIC STUDY [J].
BATES, E ;
FRIEDERICI, A ;
WULFECK, B .
BRAIN AND LANGUAGE, 1987, 32 (01) :19-67
[7]   FUNCTIONAL CONSTRAINTS ON SENTENCE PROCESSING - A CROSS-LINGUISTIC STUDY [J].
BATES, E ;
MCNEW, S ;
MACWHINNEY, B ;
DEVESCOVI, A ;
SMITH, S .
COGNITION, 1982, 11 (03) :245-299
[8]  
BATES E, 1987, MECHANISMS LANGUAGE
[9]  
Bates E., 1989, CROSSLINGUISTIC STUD
[10]   ON THE METHODOLOGY OF SINGLE-CASE STUDIES IN COGNITIVE NEUROPSYCHOLOGY [J].
BUB, J ;
BUB, D .
COGNITIVE NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 1988, 5 (05) :565-582