Language impairments in people with autoimmune neurological diseases: A scoping review
CONCLUSIONS: Language symptoms in people with ANDs are commonly reported. These are often not full descriptions or only focus on specific time points in the course of the disease. Future research needs to assess specific language functions in people with ANDs and relate their language impairments to brain damage at different stages of disease evolution.PMID:37717472 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2023.106368 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - September 17, 2023 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Janine Rook Sara Llufriu D örte de Kok Adri à Rofes Source Type: research

Language impairments in people with autoimmune neurological diseases: A scoping review
CONCLUSIONS: Language symptoms in people with ANDs are commonly reported. These are often not full descriptions or only focus on specific time points in the course of the disease. Future research needs to assess specific language functions in people with ANDs and relate their language impairments to brain damage at different stages of disease evolution.PMID:37717472 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2023.106368 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - September 17, 2023 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Janine Rook Sara Llufriu D örte de Kok Adri à Rofes Source Type: research

Language impairments in people with autoimmune neurological diseases: A scoping review
CONCLUSIONS: Language symptoms in people with ANDs are commonly reported. These are often not full descriptions or only focus on specific time points in the course of the disease. Future research needs to assess specific language functions in people with ANDs and relate their language impairments to brain damage at different stages of disease evolution.PMID:37717472 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2023.106368 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - September 17, 2023 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Janine Rook Sara Llufriu D örte de Kok Adri à Rofes Source Type: research

Language sample analysis of conversation samples from school-age children who stutter: The role of syntactic factors in stuttering
CONCLUSIONS: Findings from the IPsyn and the use of elaborate noun phrases, and to some extent verb phrases, suggested that the CWS used more complex syntax even in shorter conversational samples. More stuttered sentences in the high DSS sentence category, the use of fewer phrase revisions, and the association between stuttering and elaborated verb phrases in the CWS are interpreted to suggest the effects of syntactic planning and reformulation demands on fluency during ongoing articulation.PMID:37699262 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2023.106369 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - September 12, 2023 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Jayanthi Sasisekaran Shriya Basu Source Type: research

Language sample analysis of conversation samples from school-age children who stutter: The role of syntactic factors in stuttering
CONCLUSIONS: Findings from the IPsyn and the use of elaborate noun phrases, and to some extent verb phrases, suggested that the CWS used more complex syntax even in shorter conversational samples. More stuttered sentences in the high DSS sentence category, the use of fewer phrase revisions, and the association between stuttering and elaborated verb phrases in the CWS are interpreted to suggest the effects of syntactic planning and reformulation demands on fluency during ongoing articulation.PMID:37699262 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2023.106369 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - September 12, 2023 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Jayanthi Sasisekaran Shriya Basu Source Type: research

Language sample analysis of conversation samples from school-age children who stutter: The role of syntactic factors in stuttering
CONCLUSIONS: Findings from the IPsyn and the use of elaborate noun phrases, and to some extent verb phrases, suggested that the CWS used more complex syntax even in shorter conversational samples. More stuttered sentences in the high DSS sentence category, the use of fewer phrase revisions, and the association between stuttering and elaborated verb phrases in the CWS are interpreted to suggest the effects of syntactic planning and reformulation demands on fluency during ongoing articulation.PMID:37699262 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2023.106369 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - September 12, 2023 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Jayanthi Sasisekaran Shriya Basu Source Type: research

Language sample analysis of conversation samples from school-age children who stutter: The role of syntactic factors in stuttering
CONCLUSIONS: Findings from the IPsyn and the use of elaborate noun phrases, and to some extent verb phrases, suggested that the CWS used more complex syntax even in shorter conversational samples. More stuttered sentences in the high DSS sentence category, the use of fewer phrase revisions, and the association between stuttering and elaborated verb phrases in the CWS are interpreted to suggest the effects of syntactic planning and reformulation demands on fluency during ongoing articulation.PMID:37699262 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2023.106369 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - September 12, 2023 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Jayanthi Sasisekaran Shriya Basu Source Type: research

Language sample analysis of conversation samples from school-age children who stutter: The role of syntactic factors in stuttering
CONCLUSIONS: Findings from the IPsyn and the use of elaborate noun phrases, and to some extent verb phrases, suggested that the CWS used more complex syntax even in shorter conversational samples. More stuttered sentences in the high DSS sentence category, the use of fewer phrase revisions, and the association between stuttering and elaborated verb phrases in the CWS are interpreted to suggest the effects of syntactic planning and reformulation demands on fluency during ongoing articulation.PMID:37699262 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2023.106369 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - September 12, 2023 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Jayanthi Sasisekaran Shriya Basu Source Type: research

Satisfaction with life in a sample of prelingually deaf cochlear implant users with a good command of spoken Polish as the primary language
CONCLUSIONS: Prelingually deaf CI users with low SWL require psychological support in many spheres, including working through problems of deaf identity, self-acceptance, and depression. Additional research should involve diverse DHH CI users, including those with limited spoken Polish competency or sign language skills, as well as members of the Polish Deaf community.PMID:37683553 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2023.106370 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - September 8, 2023 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Joanna Kobosko W Wiktor Jedrzejczak Joanna Rostkowska D Beata Porembska Ma łgorzata Fludra Henryk Skar żyński Source Type: research

Satisfaction with life in a sample of prelingually deaf cochlear implant users with a good command of spoken Polish as the primary language
CONCLUSIONS: Prelingually deaf CI users with low SWL require psychological support in many spheres, including working through problems of deaf identity, self-acceptance, and depression. Additional research should involve diverse DHH CI users, including those with limited spoken Polish competency or sign language skills, as well as members of the Polish Deaf community.PMID:37683553 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2023.106370 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - September 8, 2023 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Joanna Kobosko W Wiktor Jedrzejczak Joanna Rostkowska D Beata Porembska Ma łgorzata Fludra Henryk Skar żyński Source Type: research

Satisfaction with life in a sample of prelingually deaf cochlear implant users with a good command of spoken Polish as the primary language
CONCLUSIONS: Prelingually deaf CI users with low SWL require psychological support in many spheres, including working through problems of deaf identity, self-acceptance, and depression. Additional research should involve diverse DHH CI users, including those with limited spoken Polish competency or sign language skills, as well as members of the Polish Deaf community.PMID:37683553 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2023.106370 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - September 8, 2023 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Joanna Kobosko W Wiktor Jedrzejczak Joanna Rostkowska D Beata Porembska Ma łgorzata Fludra Henryk Skar żyński Source Type: research

Language abilities, not cognitive control, predict language mixing behavior in bilingual speakers with aphasia
CONCLUSIONS: Linguistic factors such as pre- and post-stroke self-rated language proficiency and level of language impairment due to aphasia were found to predict LM frequency in L1-Russian and in L2-Hebrew. Cognitive abilities did not predict LM frequency. Based on our findings, we suggest that LM behavior in BiPWAs might be primarily related to language skills in L1 and L2, rather than to cognitive control impairments.PMID:37579674 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2023.106367 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - August 14, 2023 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Alina Bihovsky Michal Ben-Shachar Natalia Meir Source Type: research

Language abilities, not cognitive control, predict language mixing behavior in bilingual speakers with aphasia
CONCLUSIONS: Linguistic factors such as pre- and post-stroke self-rated language proficiency and level of language impairment due to aphasia were found to predict LM frequency in L1-Russian and in L2-Hebrew. Cognitive abilities did not predict LM frequency. Based on our findings, we suggest that LM behavior in BiPWAs might be primarily related to language skills in L1 and L2, rather than to cognitive control impairments.PMID:37579674 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2023.106367 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - August 14, 2023 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Alina Bihovsky Michal Ben-Shachar Natalia Meir Source Type: research

Language abilities, not cognitive control, predict language mixing behavior in bilingual speakers with aphasia
CONCLUSIONS: Linguistic factors such as pre- and post-stroke self-rated language proficiency and level of language impairment due to aphasia were found to predict LM frequency in L1-Russian and in L2-Hebrew. Cognitive abilities did not predict LM frequency. Based on our findings, we suggest that LM behavior in BiPWAs might be primarily related to language skills in L1 and L2, rather than to cognitive control impairments.PMID:37579674 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2023.106367 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - August 14, 2023 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Alina Bihovsky Michal Ben-Shachar Natalia Meir Source Type: research

Language abilities, not cognitive control, predict language mixing behavior in bilingual speakers with aphasia
CONCLUSIONS: Linguistic factors such as pre- and post-stroke self-rated language proficiency and level of language impairment due to aphasia were found to predict LM frequency in L1-Russian and in L2-Hebrew. Cognitive abilities did not predict LM frequency. Based on our findings, we suggest that LM behavior in BiPWAs might be primarily related to language skills in L1 and L2, rather than to cognitive control impairments.PMID:37579674 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2023.106367 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - August 14, 2023 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Alina Bihovsky Michal Ben-Shachar Natalia Meir Source Type: research