Lexical and Cognitive Underpinnings of Verbal Fluency: Evidence from Bengali-English Bilingual Aphasia
Research in bilingual healthy controls (BHC) has illustrated that detailed characterization of verbal fluency along with separate measures of executive control stand to inform our understanding of the lexical and cognitive underpinnings of the task. Such data are currently lacking in bilinguals with...
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doaj-fd051aa27ace4077ae2cb3037b2bda612020-11-25T02:19:30ZengMDPI AGBehavioral Sciences2076-328X2020-10-011015515510.3390/bs10100155Lexical and Cognitive Underpinnings of Verbal Fluency: Evidence from Bengali-English Bilingual AphasiaAbhijeet Patra0Arpita Bose1Theodoros Marinis2School of Psychology and Clinical Language Sciences, University of Reading, Reading RG6 7BE, UKSchool of Psychology and Clinical Language Sciences, University of Reading, Reading RG6 7BE, UKSchool of Psychology and Clinical Language Sciences, University of Reading, Reading RG6 7BE, UKResearch in bilingual healthy controls (BHC) has illustrated that detailed characterization of verbal fluency along with separate measures of executive control stand to inform our understanding of the lexical and cognitive underpinnings of the task. Such data are currently lacking in bilinguals with aphasia (BWA). We aimed to compare the characteristics of verbal fluency performance (semantic, letter) in Bengali–English BWA and BHC, in terms of cross-linguistic differences, variation on the parameters of bilingualism, and cognitive underpinnings. BWA showed significant differences on verbal fluency variables where executive control demands were higher (fluency difference score, number of switches, between-cluster pauses); whilst performed similarly on variables where executive control demands were lower (cluster size, within-cluster pauses). Despite clear cross-linguistic advantage in Bengali for BHC, no cross-linguistic differences were noted in BWA. BWA who were most affected in the independent executive control measures also showed greater impairment in letter fluency condition. Correlation analyses revealed a significant relationship for BWA between inhibitory control and number of correct responses, initial retrieval time, and number of switches. This research contributes to the debate of underlying mechanisms of word retrieval deficits in aphasia, and adds to the nascent literature of BWA in South Asian languages.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-328X/10/10/155AphasiaBengaliBilingualExecutive controlInhibitionCluster |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Abhijeet Patra Arpita Bose Theodoros Marinis |
spellingShingle |
Abhijeet Patra Arpita Bose Theodoros Marinis Lexical and Cognitive Underpinnings of Verbal Fluency: Evidence from Bengali-English Bilingual Aphasia Behavioral Sciences Aphasia Bengali Bilingual Executive control Inhibition Cluster |
author_facet |
Abhijeet Patra Arpita Bose Theodoros Marinis |
author_sort |
Abhijeet Patra |
title |
Lexical and Cognitive Underpinnings of Verbal Fluency: Evidence from Bengali-English Bilingual Aphasia |
title_short |
Lexical and Cognitive Underpinnings of Verbal Fluency: Evidence from Bengali-English Bilingual Aphasia |
title_full |
Lexical and Cognitive Underpinnings of Verbal Fluency: Evidence from Bengali-English Bilingual Aphasia |
title_fullStr |
Lexical and Cognitive Underpinnings of Verbal Fluency: Evidence from Bengali-English Bilingual Aphasia |
title_full_unstemmed |
Lexical and Cognitive Underpinnings of Verbal Fluency: Evidence from Bengali-English Bilingual Aphasia |
title_sort |
lexical and cognitive underpinnings of verbal fluency: evidence from bengali-english bilingual aphasia |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Behavioral Sciences |
issn |
2076-328X |
publishDate |
2020-10-01 |
description |
Research in bilingual healthy controls (BHC) has illustrated that detailed characterization of verbal fluency along with separate measures of executive control stand to inform our understanding of the lexical and cognitive underpinnings of the task. Such data are currently lacking in bilinguals with aphasia (BWA). We aimed to compare the characteristics of verbal fluency performance (semantic, letter) in Bengali–English BWA and BHC, in terms of cross-linguistic differences, variation on the parameters of bilingualism, and cognitive underpinnings. BWA showed significant differences on verbal fluency variables where executive control demands were higher (fluency difference score, number of switches, between-cluster pauses); whilst performed similarly on variables where executive control demands were lower (cluster size, within-cluster pauses). Despite clear cross-linguistic advantage in Bengali for BHC, no cross-linguistic differences were noted in BWA. BWA who were most affected in the independent executive control measures also showed greater impairment in letter fluency condition. Correlation analyses revealed a significant relationship for BWA between inhibitory control and number of correct responses, initial retrieval time, and number of switches. This research contributes to the debate of underlying mechanisms of word retrieval deficits in aphasia, and adds to the nascent literature of BWA in South Asian languages. |
topic |
Aphasia Bengali Bilingual Executive control Inhibition Cluster |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2076-328X/10/10/155 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT abhijeetpatra lexicalandcognitiveunderpinningsofverbalfluencyevidencefrombengalienglishbilingualaphasia AT arpitabose lexicalandcognitiveunderpinningsofverbalfluencyevidencefrombengalienglishbilingualaphasia AT theodorosmarinis lexicalandcognitiveunderpinningsofverbalfluencyevidencefrombengalienglishbilingualaphasia |
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