Aphasia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Determining the Implicit and Rule-based Learning Ability of Individuals With Aphasia to Better Align Learning Ability and Intervention
Verified date | March 2024 |
Source | MGH Institute of Health Professions |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Aphasia is an impairment in the expression or comprehension of language that results from stroke, traumatic brain injury or progressive neurological disease. Approximately two million people in the United States suffer from aphasia, which has profound impacts on quality of life, the ability to return to work and participation in life activities. Research has shown that speech-language therapy, the treatment for aphasia, can significantly improve people's ability to communicate. However, a major limitation in the field of aphasia rehabilitation is the lack of predictability in patients' response to therapy and the inability to tailor treatment to individuals. Currently, aphasia treatments are selected largely based on patient's language abilities and language deficits with little consideration of learning ability, which this study refers to as learning phenotype. Learning phenotype has been used to inform rehabilitation approaches in other domains but is not currently considered in aphasia. The overarching hypothesis of this work is that poor alignment of learning ability and language therapy limits progress for patients and presents a barrier to individualizing treatment. The objectives of the proposed study are to (1) determine the learning phenotype of individuals with aphasia, and (2) examine how lesion characteristics (size and location of damage to the brain), language ability and cognitive ability relate to learning ability. To accomplish objectives, investigators propose to measure implicit (observational) and explicit (rule-based) learning ability in people with aphasia via computer-based tasks. Regression models will be used to examine brain and behavioral factors that relate to learning ability.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 18 |
Est. completion date | September 1, 2023 |
Est. primary completion date | September 1, 2023 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 80 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion criteria - Aphasia due to left hemisphere stroke - Must be in the chronic stages of aphasia, at least 6 months post onset of stroke - Must be between the ages of 18 and 80 years of age - Must have near to normal uncorrected or corrected vision per self-report - Must be medically and neurologically stable and at least wheelchair ambulatory Exclusion criteria - History of significant psychiatric or medical disease - Presence of visual field cuts or visual neglect as determined by the Cognitive Linguistic Quick Test (CLQT; Helm-Estabrooks, 2017) symbol cancellation task - Implanted medical devices or metal fragments that are not MRI safe |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | MGH Institute of Health Professions | Boston | Massachusetts |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
MGH Institute of Health Professions | National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD) |
United States,
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Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Observational learning ability | Saccadic response time difference between sequenced blocks relate to pseudorandom blocks | up to 6 months | |
Primary | Rule-based learning ability | Accuracy on testing phase following rule-based instruction of artificial grammar expressed in nonlinguistic form. | up to 6 months | |
Secondary | Language severity | Standardized measure of severity of expressive and receptive language deficits (WAB score range 0 - 100 with high scores indicating lower severity) | Baseline | |
Secondary | Cognitive score | Composite score based on standardized assessments of attention, working memory, & executive function (attention from TEA, score range 0 - 7 with high scores indicating better attention; working memory from TALSA Synonymy triplet, score range 0 - 40 with high scores indicating better working memory; executive function from CLQT design generation and trails, score range 0 - 23 with high scores indicating better executive function). Composite scores will thus range from 0 to 70 with higher scores indicating higher cognitive ability. | Baseline | |
Secondary | Percent spared tissue | Percent spared tissue in brain regions of interest | up to 6 months |
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