Written discourse in diagnosis for acquired neurogenic communication disorders: current evidence and future directions

ConclusionDifferences in linguistic features by patient populations are not yet clear due to the limited number of studies and different measures and tasks used across the studies. Nevertheless, there is substantial evidence of numerous linguistic features in acquired neurogenic communication disorders that depart from those of healthy controls. Compared to the controls, people with aphasia tend to produce fewer words, and syntactically simpler utterances compared to the controls. People with Alzheimer’s disease produce less information content, and this feature increases over time, as reported in longitudinal studies. Our review imparts additional information that written and spoken discourse provide unique insights into the cognitive and linguistic deficits experienced by people with aphasia, Alzheimer’s disease, mild cognitive impairment and primary progressive aphasia and provide targets for treatment to improve written communication in these groups.
Source: Frontiers in Human Neuroscience - Category: Neuroscience Source Type: research