Effects of Sensory Cues on Quantity and Quality of Utterances in Conversation Groups with Individuals with Dementia

Individuals with dementia have language and memory deficits that interfere with their functional abilities, such as conversation skills. A Variety of treatments have been developed to address these deficits during group conversation activities. Interventions that provide various sensory cues (e.g.,...

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Other Authors: Johnson, Kimberly Ann (authoraut)
Format: Others
Language:English
English
Published: Florida State University
Subjects:
Online Access:http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-3508
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spelling ndltd-fsu.edu-oai-fsu.digital.flvc.org-fsu_1818022020-06-10T03:09:09Z Effects of Sensory Cues on Quantity and Quality of Utterances in Conversation Groups with Individuals with Dementia Johnson, Kimberly Ann (authoraut) Bourgeois, Michelle (professor directing dissertation) Vinton, Linda (outside committee member) Goldstein, Howard (committee member) Lasker, Joanne (committee member) School of Communication Science and Disorders (degree granting department) Florida State University (degree granting institution) Text text Florida State University Florida State University English eng 1 online resource computer application/pdf Individuals with dementia have language and memory deficits that interfere with their functional abilities, such as conversation skills. A Variety of treatments have been developed to address these deficits during group conversation activities. Interventions that provide various sensory cues (e.g., visual, verbal, tactile) have been found to facilitate conversation groups. The current research attempted to evaluate the effects of auditory plus tactile and auditory plus written conditions on the conversational behavior of five persons with dementia in a group activity using an alternating treatment design. In a listening treatment condition (auditory plus tactile) participants listened to a story read by a staff facilitator while holding an object that was related to the story and answered questions about the story. In the reading treatment condition (auditory plus written), participants took turns reading aloud the story text and then took turns reading aloud questions about the story to elicit conversation. The quantity and quality of utterances for the participants and the facilitator were scored from transcripts of the audiotaped sessions. The results revealed no treatment effects for the quantity and quality of utterances by the participants for either condition. The treatments were subsequently modified to reduce the length and complexity of the story stimuli. With the treatment modification, only one participant demonstrated a clear increase in quantity and quality of utterances after treatment was implemented. Naïve judges' ratings of seven conversational quality indicators corroborated the lack of treatment effects. Baseline sessions were judged to be more comfortable, more clear, having more novel information, more on-topic utterances, more equality of turns, more participant-led discussion, and more participant engagement than either treatment condition. Factors related to the participant characteristics, the treatment protocol, and the physical environment may have contributed to the lack of treatment effects in this study as compared to other more successful conversational interventions. A Dissertation submitted to the Department of Communication Disorders in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctorate of Philosophy. Spring Semester, 2003. April 2, 2003. Memory Loss, Dementia Cueing Includes bibliographical references. Michelle Bourgeois, Professor Directing Dissertation; Linda Vinton, Outside Committee Member; Howard Goldstein, Committee Member; Joanne Lasker, Committee Member. Communication Communicative disorders FSU_migr_etd-3508 http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-3508 This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s). The copyright in theses and dissertations completed at Florida State University is held by the students who author them. http://diginole.lib.fsu.edu/islandora/object/fsu%3A181802/datastream/TN/view/Effects%20of%20Sensory%20Cues%20on%20Quantity%20and%20Quality%20of%20Utterances%20in%20Conversation%20Groups%20with%20Individuals%20with%20Dementia.jpg
collection NDLTD
language English
English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Communication
Communicative disorders
spellingShingle Communication
Communicative disorders
Effects of Sensory Cues on Quantity and Quality of Utterances in Conversation Groups with Individuals with Dementia
description Individuals with dementia have language and memory deficits that interfere with their functional abilities, such as conversation skills. A Variety of treatments have been developed to address these deficits during group conversation activities. Interventions that provide various sensory cues (e.g., visual, verbal, tactile) have been found to facilitate conversation groups. The current research attempted to evaluate the effects of auditory plus tactile and auditory plus written conditions on the conversational behavior of five persons with dementia in a group activity using an alternating treatment design. In a listening treatment condition (auditory plus tactile) participants listened to a story read by a staff facilitator while holding an object that was related to the story and answered questions about the story. In the reading treatment condition (auditory plus written), participants took turns reading aloud the story text and then took turns reading aloud questions about the story to elicit conversation. The quantity and quality of utterances for the participants and the facilitator were scored from transcripts of the audiotaped sessions. The results revealed no treatment effects for the quantity and quality of utterances by the participants for either condition. The treatments were subsequently modified to reduce the length and complexity of the story stimuli. With the treatment modification, only one participant demonstrated a clear increase in quantity and quality of utterances after treatment was implemented. Naïve judges' ratings of seven conversational quality indicators corroborated the lack of treatment effects. Baseline sessions were judged to be more comfortable, more clear, having more novel information, more on-topic utterances, more equality of turns, more participant-led discussion, and more participant engagement than either treatment condition. Factors related to the participant characteristics, the treatment protocol, and the physical environment may have contributed to the lack of treatment effects in this study as compared to other more successful conversational interventions. === A Dissertation submitted to the Department of Communication Disorders in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctorate of Philosophy. === Spring Semester, 2003. === April 2, 2003. === Memory Loss, Dementia Cueing === Includes bibliographical references. === Michelle Bourgeois, Professor Directing Dissertation; Linda Vinton, Outside Committee Member; Howard Goldstein, Committee Member; Joanne Lasker, Committee Member.
author2 Johnson, Kimberly Ann (authoraut)
author_facet Johnson, Kimberly Ann (authoraut)
title Effects of Sensory Cues on Quantity and Quality of Utterances in Conversation Groups with Individuals with Dementia
title_short Effects of Sensory Cues on Quantity and Quality of Utterances in Conversation Groups with Individuals with Dementia
title_full Effects of Sensory Cues on Quantity and Quality of Utterances in Conversation Groups with Individuals with Dementia
title_fullStr Effects of Sensory Cues on Quantity and Quality of Utterances in Conversation Groups with Individuals with Dementia
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Sensory Cues on Quantity and Quality of Utterances in Conversation Groups with Individuals with Dementia
title_sort effects of sensory cues on quantity and quality of utterances in conversation groups with individuals with dementia
publisher Florida State University
url http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-3508
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