Login / Signup

Intraverbal Assessment for Persons with Aphasia or Other Acquired Brain Injury.

Barbara E EschTracie L LindbladBrittany ClarkZareen Ali
Published in: The Analysis of verbal behavior (2023)
An intraverbal assessment was administered to older adults with aphasia, using a hierarchy of questions that required increasingly complex verbal discriminative stimulus control. Five categories of errors were defined and analyzed for putative stimulus control, with the aim to identify requisite assessment components leading to more efficient and effective treatments. Evocative control over intraverbal error responses was evident throughout the database, as shown by commonalities within four distinct categories of errors; a fifth category, representing a narrow majority of errors, was less clear in terms of functional control over responses. Generally, questions requiring increasingly complex intraverbal stimulus control resulted in weaker verbal performance for those with aphasia. A new 9-point intraverbal assessment model is proposed, based on Skinner's functional analysis of verbal behavior. The study underscores that loss or disruption of a formerly sophisticated language repertoire presents differently than the fledgling language skills and errors of new learners, such as typically developing children and those with autism or developmental disabilities. Thus, we would do well to consider that rehabilitation may require a different approach to intervention than habilitation. We offer several thematic topics for future research in this area.
Keyphrases
  • brain injury
  • working memory
  • patient safety
  • adverse drug
  • autism spectrum disorder
  • randomized controlled trial
  • subarachnoid hemorrhage
  • physical activity
  • middle aged
  • electronic health record