Functional magnetic resonance imaging of recovery from post-stroke aphasia

This thesis presents the design, development and application of a novel overt picture-naming paradigm through a series of exploratory behavioural and imaging experiments. The paradigm is subsequently used in a functional magnetic resonance imaging study of recovery from post-stroke aphasia. The poss...

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Main Author: Bethel, Susannah
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/12635/
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author Bethel, Susannah
author_facet Bethel, Susannah
author_sort Bethel, Susannah
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis presents the design, development and application of a novel overt picture-naming paradigm through a series of exploratory behavioural and imaging experiments. The paradigm is subsequently used in a functional magnetic resonance imaging study of recovery from post-stroke aphasia. The possibility of comparing correct and error naming responses in aphasic patients and unimpaired subjects induced to make errors was investigated and successfully trialled. This research improves on techniques currently favoured in imaging studies to explore the processes involved in functional recovery in a more analytical way. The novel study design provides a new way to interrogate processing involved in the production of aphasic responses. The intentions of this project were to drive the research field of post-stroke aphasia recovery forward by suggesting and applying new methods of using functional imaging to investigate the current pertinent research questions. In addition to this, it was aimed that data collected from participants who have an aphasic deficit, and those with a healthy language system, would be analysed to provide evidence of how a stroke damaged brain may recover functional language. It was hypothesised that results from aphasic patients would show that successful language performance is associated with cortical activation of the patients' normal left hemispheric language areas, around their lesion site. Conversely, the hypotheses state that production of linguistic errors would correlate with an increase in activation in areas of the right hemisphere homologous to the left lateralised fronto-temporal language production network. It was thought that further investigation of successful and unsuccessful language performance in unimpaired speakers would echo this finding. The current debate in this research field centres on the role of the undamaged hemisphere in successful recovery. Five chronic stage aphasics were tested using the developed continuous scanning, event-related paradigm and their correct and error naming trials were compared. Results indicate that recruitment of cortical areas homologous to the stroke lesion can support successful language processing. This is contrary to the theory that disinhibition of non-dominant language areas may contribute to the production of aphasic errors. An investigation of forced errors in unimpaired speakers was also conducted to provide comparisons with the aphasic patient group. Imaging results showed that the naming-to-deadline paradigm used may provide a useful baseline for the normal processes involved in the monitoring and control of task performance.
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spelling nottingham-126352025-02-28T11:20:27Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/12635/ Functional magnetic resonance imaging of recovery from post-stroke aphasia Bethel, Susannah This thesis presents the design, development and application of a novel overt picture-naming paradigm through a series of exploratory behavioural and imaging experiments. The paradigm is subsequently used in a functional magnetic resonance imaging study of recovery from post-stroke aphasia. The possibility of comparing correct and error naming responses in aphasic patients and unimpaired subjects induced to make errors was investigated and successfully trialled. This research improves on techniques currently favoured in imaging studies to explore the processes involved in functional recovery in a more analytical way. The novel study design provides a new way to interrogate processing involved in the production of aphasic responses. The intentions of this project were to drive the research field of post-stroke aphasia recovery forward by suggesting and applying new methods of using functional imaging to investigate the current pertinent research questions. In addition to this, it was aimed that data collected from participants who have an aphasic deficit, and those with a healthy language system, would be analysed to provide evidence of how a stroke damaged brain may recover functional language. It was hypothesised that results from aphasic patients would show that successful language performance is associated with cortical activation of the patients' normal left hemispheric language areas, around their lesion site. Conversely, the hypotheses state that production of linguistic errors would correlate with an increase in activation in areas of the right hemisphere homologous to the left lateralised fronto-temporal language production network. It was thought that further investigation of successful and unsuccessful language performance in unimpaired speakers would echo this finding. The current debate in this research field centres on the role of the undamaged hemisphere in successful recovery. Five chronic stage aphasics were tested using the developed continuous scanning, event-related paradigm and their correct and error naming trials were compared. Results indicate that recruitment of cortical areas homologous to the stroke lesion can support successful language processing. This is contrary to the theory that disinhibition of non-dominant language areas may contribute to the production of aphasic errors. An investigation of forced errors in unimpaired speakers was also conducted to provide comparisons with the aphasic patient group. Imaging results showed that the naming-to-deadline paradigm used may provide a useful baseline for the normal processes involved in the monitoring and control of task performance. 2009-12-10 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/12635/1/517853.pdf Bethel, Susannah (2009) Functional magnetic resonance imaging of recovery from post-stroke aphasia. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Complications of cerebrovascular disease Magnetic resonance imaging Aphasic responses Functional recovery
spellingShingle Complications of cerebrovascular disease
Magnetic resonance imaging
Aphasic responses
Functional recovery
Bethel, Susannah
Functional magnetic resonance imaging of recovery from post-stroke aphasia
title Functional magnetic resonance imaging of recovery from post-stroke aphasia
title_full Functional magnetic resonance imaging of recovery from post-stroke aphasia
title_fullStr Functional magnetic resonance imaging of recovery from post-stroke aphasia
title_full_unstemmed Functional magnetic resonance imaging of recovery from post-stroke aphasia
title_short Functional magnetic resonance imaging of recovery from post-stroke aphasia
title_sort functional magnetic resonance imaging of recovery from post-stroke aphasia
topic Complications of cerebrovascular disease
Magnetic resonance imaging
Aphasic responses
Functional recovery
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/12635/