Superior written over spoken picture naming in a case of frontotemporal dementia
Superior written over spoken picture naming in a case of frontotemporal dementia
Two main hypotheses have been proposed regarding the role of phonology in written word production. According to the phonological mediation hypothesis, the retrieval of the lexical phonological representation of a word is an obligatory prerequisite to the retrieval of its spelling. Therefore, deficits to the phonological lexicon should affect both spoken and written picture naming. In contrast, the orthographic autonomy hypothesis posits that the lexical orthographic representations of words can be accessed without any necessary phonological mediation. In support of this view, cases of preserved written naming despite impaired lexical phonology have been reported following brain damage. In this report, we replicate this basic pattern of performance in case YP, a 60-year-old woman with a pattern of frontotemporal dementia. As her disease progressed, YP’s ability to write down the names of pictures remained very good despite a severe decline in oral naming. Further testing indicated that this deficit was not primarily due to an articulatory or post-lexical phonological deficit. YP’s case provides strong additional support for the orthographic autonomy hypothesis. The significance of this case with respect to the characterization of dementia syndromes is discussed.
89-96
Tainturier, Marie Josèphe
1084aaa3-62a3-4387-a61d-78a3addd9eec
Moreaud, Olivier
333ebac5-0b06-4e6f-bfa9-8b4f2f919533
David, Danielle
528db619-be8d-436e-8f42-f28dd8e15aea
Leek, E. Charles
6f63c405-e28f-4f8c-8ead-3b0a79c7dc88
Pellat, Jacques
0d20e372-3069-4efb-9265-d128f4fd99bc
2001
Tainturier, Marie Josèphe
1084aaa3-62a3-4387-a61d-78a3addd9eec
Moreaud, Olivier
333ebac5-0b06-4e6f-bfa9-8b4f2f919533
David, Danielle
528db619-be8d-436e-8f42-f28dd8e15aea
Leek, E. Charles
6f63c405-e28f-4f8c-8ead-3b0a79c7dc88
Pellat, Jacques
0d20e372-3069-4efb-9265-d128f4fd99bc
Tainturier, Marie Josèphe, Moreaud, Olivier, David, Danielle, Leek, E. Charles and Pellat, Jacques
(2001)
Superior written over spoken picture naming in a case of frontotemporal dementia.
Neurocase, 7 (1), .
(doi:10.1093/neucas/7.1.89).
Abstract
Two main hypotheses have been proposed regarding the role of phonology in written word production. According to the phonological mediation hypothesis, the retrieval of the lexical phonological representation of a word is an obligatory prerequisite to the retrieval of its spelling. Therefore, deficits to the phonological lexicon should affect both spoken and written picture naming. In contrast, the orthographic autonomy hypothesis posits that the lexical orthographic representations of words can be accessed without any necessary phonological mediation. In support of this view, cases of preserved written naming despite impaired lexical phonology have been reported following brain damage. In this report, we replicate this basic pattern of performance in case YP, a 60-year-old woman with a pattern of frontotemporal dementia. As her disease progressed, YP’s ability to write down the names of pictures remained very good despite a severe decline in oral naming. Further testing indicated that this deficit was not primarily due to an articulatory or post-lexical phonological deficit. YP’s case provides strong additional support for the orthographic autonomy hypothesis. The significance of this case with respect to the characterization of dementia syndromes is discussed.
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Published date: 2001
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Local EPrints ID: 493561
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493561
ISSN: 1355-4794
PURE UUID: 5626f4bf-5f9c-4e76-a55a-ce121f0449c9
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Date deposited: 06 Sep 2024 16:33
Last modified: 07 Sep 2024 02:11
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Author:
Marie Josèphe Tainturier
Author:
Olivier Moreaud
Author:
Danielle David
Author:
E. Charles Leek
Author:
Jacques Pellat
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