Stroke Clinical Trial
Official title:
Aphasia Rehabilitation: Modulating Cues, Feedback & Practice
The purpose of this study is to evaluate how changing different conditions of the speech-language treatment (such as cues, feedback, complexity and practice schedule) affects the language outcome of study subjects with aphasia (i.e., difficulty with the comprehension and expression of spoken and written language) following a stroke.
Stroke is the third leading cause of death and the most common cause of disability in the
United States. According to the American Stroke Association, the prevalence of stroke in the
U.S. is approximately 4.8 million with approximately 700,000 additional strokes occurring
annually. Approximately 150,000 to 250,000 stroke survivors becoming severely and permanently
disabled each year.
A common neurological deficit among stroke survivors, and thus a substantial contributor to
post-stroke disability, is aphasia. The loss of, or difficulty with language is extremely
debilitating. Recently, there has been an emphasis on the need for intensive aphasia
treatment in order to make the long-term neuroplastic changes associated with recovery.
However, specific information regarding effective learning parameters is limited.
A number of variables and practice conditions, deriving from motor learning theory,
potentially impact the rehabilitation process. Several of these variables have begun to be
addressed in the literature, but with conflicting or scant evidence to date. Variables
include the type and degree of external cueing, low versus high feedback conditions, task
complexity, and practice distribution and schedule.
The purpose of this study is to:
- Modulate variables of cuing, feedback and script complexity that potentially affect
treatment outcomes, and measure their effects on acquisition, maintenance and
generalization of script learning. These investigations are conducted as separate
studies, with the first study being a cross-over study investigating cuing and the
second study being a 2x2 factorial design investigating feedback and complexity.
- Modify and optimize AphasiaScripts—an existing treatment program having experimental
support for its efficacy—by incorporating these findings.
- Conduct a clinical trial, incorporating the optimized AphasiaScripts program, in order
to measure the effect of massed vs distributed practice, and blocked vs random practice
schedules, on the acquisition, maintenance and generalization of script learning.
Measures will include independent pre-and post assessments of acquisition, maintenance and
generalization of script learning as well as dependent item/cue level measures of progress.
Results and computational models of acquisition, maintenance and generalization will
contribute new evidence to support not just the efficacy and delivery of AphasiaScripts, but
also the application of practice principles to aphasia treatment in general.
The first part of the study - a cross-over study that evaluates error-free versus
error-reducing script training has been done. Below is a description of the second part of
the study which evaluates feedback and script complexity.
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