Flying under the radar: Figurative language impairments in focal lesion patients

Despite the prevalent and natural use of metaphor in everyday language, the neural basis of this powerful communication device remains poorly understood. Early studies of brain-injured patients suggested the right hemisphere plays a critical role in metaphor comprehension, but more recent patient an...

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Main Authors: Geena Rose Ianni, Eileen Robin Cardillo, Marguerite eMcQuire, Anjan eChatterjee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-11-01
Series:Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2014.00871/full
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spelling doaj-f53a5327ec87432bb1cc15767d96845d2020-11-25T02:38:15ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Human Neuroscience1662-51612014-11-01810.3389/fnhum.2014.0087193417Flying under the radar: Figurative language impairments in focal lesion patientsGeena Rose Ianni0Eileen Robin Cardillo1Marguerite eMcQuire2Anjan eChatterjee3National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of HealthUniversity of PennsylvaniaUniversity of PennsylvaniaUniversity of PennsylvaniaDespite the prevalent and natural use of metaphor in everyday language, the neural basis of this powerful communication device remains poorly understood. Early studies of brain-injured patients suggested the right hemisphere plays a critical role in metaphor comprehension, but more recent patient and neuroimaging studies do not consistently support this hypothesis. One explanation for this discrepancy is the challenge in designing optimal tasks for brain-injured populations. As traditional aphasia assessments do not assess figurative language comprehension, we designed a new metaphor comprehension task to consider whether impaired metaphor processing is missed by standard clinical assessments. Stimuli consisted of 60 pairs of moderately familiar metaphors and closely matched literal sentences. Sentences were presented visually in a randomized order, followed by four adjective-noun answer choices (target + three foil types). Participants were instructed to select the phrase that best matched the meaning of the sentence. We report the performance of three focal lesion patients and a group of 12 healthy, older controls. Controls performed near ceiling in both conditions, with slightly more accurate performance on literal than metaphoric sentences. While the Western Aphasia Battery (Kertesz, 1982) and the Objects and Actions Naming Battery (Druks, 1992) indicated minimal to no language difficulty, our metaphor comprehension task indicated three different profiles of metaphor comprehension impairment in the patients’ performance. Single case statistics revealed comparable impairment on metaphoric and literal sentences, disproportionately greater impairment on metaphors than literal sentences, and selective impairment on metaphors. We conclude our task reveals that patients can have selective metaphor comprehension deficits. These deficits are not captured by traditional neuropsychological language assessments, suggesting overlooked communication difficulties.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2014.00871/fullAphasiasentence comprehensionfigurative languagemetaphorcase studyfocal lesion patients
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Geena Rose Ianni
Eileen Robin Cardillo
Marguerite eMcQuire
Anjan eChatterjee
spellingShingle Geena Rose Ianni
Eileen Robin Cardillo
Marguerite eMcQuire
Anjan eChatterjee
Flying under the radar: Figurative language impairments in focal lesion patients
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Aphasia
sentence comprehension
figurative language
metaphor
case study
focal lesion patients
author_facet Geena Rose Ianni
Eileen Robin Cardillo
Marguerite eMcQuire
Anjan eChatterjee
author_sort Geena Rose Ianni
title Flying under the radar: Figurative language impairments in focal lesion patients
title_short Flying under the radar: Figurative language impairments in focal lesion patients
title_full Flying under the radar: Figurative language impairments in focal lesion patients
title_fullStr Flying under the radar: Figurative language impairments in focal lesion patients
title_full_unstemmed Flying under the radar: Figurative language impairments in focal lesion patients
title_sort flying under the radar: figurative language impairments in focal lesion patients
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
issn 1662-5161
publishDate 2014-11-01
description Despite the prevalent and natural use of metaphor in everyday language, the neural basis of this powerful communication device remains poorly understood. Early studies of brain-injured patients suggested the right hemisphere plays a critical role in metaphor comprehension, but more recent patient and neuroimaging studies do not consistently support this hypothesis. One explanation for this discrepancy is the challenge in designing optimal tasks for brain-injured populations. As traditional aphasia assessments do not assess figurative language comprehension, we designed a new metaphor comprehension task to consider whether impaired metaphor processing is missed by standard clinical assessments. Stimuli consisted of 60 pairs of moderately familiar metaphors and closely matched literal sentences. Sentences were presented visually in a randomized order, followed by four adjective-noun answer choices (target + three foil types). Participants were instructed to select the phrase that best matched the meaning of the sentence. We report the performance of three focal lesion patients and a group of 12 healthy, older controls. Controls performed near ceiling in both conditions, with slightly more accurate performance on literal than metaphoric sentences. While the Western Aphasia Battery (Kertesz, 1982) and the Objects and Actions Naming Battery (Druks, 1992) indicated minimal to no language difficulty, our metaphor comprehension task indicated three different profiles of metaphor comprehension impairment in the patients’ performance. Single case statistics revealed comparable impairment on metaphoric and literal sentences, disproportionately greater impairment on metaphors than literal sentences, and selective impairment on metaphors. We conclude our task reveals that patients can have selective metaphor comprehension deficits. These deficits are not captured by traditional neuropsychological language assessments, suggesting overlooked communication difficulties.
topic Aphasia
sentence comprehension
figurative language
metaphor
case study
focal lesion patients
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2014.00871/full
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