All Relations between Anomia and semantics

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
R Jokel, E Rochon, C Leonar. Therapy for anomia in semantic dementia. Brain and cognition. vol 49. issue 2. 2004-08-19. PMID:15259401. an intervention program was designed to halt and/or decelerate the effects of progressive anomia in ak, a 63-year-old female with semantic dementia. 2004-08-19 2023-08-12 Not clear
M Delazer, C Semenza, M Reiner, R Hofer, T Benk. Anomia for people names in DAT--evidence for semantic and post-semantic impairments. Neuropsychologia. vol 41. issue 12. 2003-09-09. PMID:12887984. anomia for people names in dat--evidence for semantic and post-semantic impairments. 2003-09-09 2023-08-12 human
M Delazer, C Semenza, M Reiner, R Hofer, T Benk. Anomia for people names in DAT--evidence for semantic and post-semantic impairments. Neuropsychologia. vol 41. issue 12. 2003-09-09. PMID:12887984. the high number of tip-of-the-tongue (tot) answers in dat found in relation to few spontaneously named items shows that post-semantic deficits are as important as semantic deficits in determining anomia for people names in dat. 2003-09-09 2023-08-12 human
M Delazer, C Semenza, M Reiner, R Hofer, T Benk. Anomia for people names in DAT--evidence for semantic and post-semantic impairments. Neuropsychologia. vol 41. issue 12. 2003-09-09. PMID:12887984. these findings suggest that proper name anomia in dat is not only due to semantic deficits, but also to problems in accessing the phonological representation, as well as to a degradation of phonological representations. 2003-09-09 2023-08-12 human
Naama Friedmann, Michal Bira. When is gender accessed? A study of paraphasias in Hebrew anomia. Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior. vol 39. issue 3. 2003-08-28. PMID:12870821. participants were 22 hebrew-speaking aphasic patients with phonological, semantic or conceptual anomia, who produced 532 paraphasias. 2003-08-28 2023-08-12 human
P J Ousset, G Viallard, M Puel, P Celsis, J F Démonet, D Cardeba. Lexical therapy and episodic word learning in dementia of the Alzheimer type. Brain and language. vol 80. issue 1. 2002-05-21. PMID:11817887. in mild ad patients with anomia and no severe semantic impairment, a reinforcement of the relationship between the form of the object and the corresponding lexical label in episodic long term memory during language therapy may account for the observed lexical improvement. 2002-05-21 2023-08-12 Not clear
C Avila, M A Lambon Ralph, M A Parcet, D Geffner, J M Gonzalez-Darde. Implicit word cues facilitate impaired naming performance: evidence from a case of anomia. Brain and language. vol 79. issue 2. 2002-02-07. PMID:11712843. word-finding difficulties observed in some patients with anomia have been attributed to an insufficient activation of phonology by semantics. 2002-02-07 2023-08-12 Not clear
M A Lambon Ralph, J L McClelland, K Patterson, C J Galton, J R Hodge. No right to speak? The relationship between object naming and semantic impairment: neuropsychological evidence and a computational model. Journal of cognitive neuroscience. vol 13. issue 3. 2001-07-19. PMID:11371312. although all patients with semantic dementia are impaired in both single-word production and comprehension, previous reports had indicated two different patterns: (a) a parallel decline in accuracy of naming and comprehension, with frequent semantic naming errors, suggesting a purely semantic basis for the anomia and (b) a dramatic progressive anomia without commensurate decline in comprehension, which might suggest a mainly postsemantic source of the anomia. 2001-07-19 2023-08-12 Not clear
M A Lambon Ralph, J L McClelland, K Patterson, C J Galton, J R Hodge. No right to speak? The relationship between object naming and semantic impairment: neuropsychological evidence and a computational model. Journal of cognitive neuroscience. vol 13. issue 3. 2001-07-19. PMID:11371312. longitudinal data for 16 patients with semantic dementia reflected these two profiles, but with the following additional important specifications: (1) despite a few relatively extreme versions of one or other profile, the full set of cases formed a continuum in the extent of anomia for a given degree of degraded comprehension; (2) the degree of disparity between these two abilities was associated with relative asymmetry in laterality of atrophy: a parallel decline in the two measures characterized patients with greater right- than left-temporal atrophy, while disproportionate anomia occurred with a predominance of atrophy in the left-temporal lobe. 2001-07-19 2023-08-12 Not clear
M M Mesula. Primary progressive aphasia. Annals of neurology. vol 49. issue 4. 2001-05-31. PMID:11310619. the disease starts with word-finding disturbances (anomia) and frequently proceeds to impair the grammatical structure (syntax) and comprehension (semantics) of language. 2001-05-31 2023-08-12 Not clear
G Schumann, U Halsband, J Kassubek, S Gustin, T Heinks, F D Juengling, M Hül. Combined semantic dementia and apraxia in a patient with frontotemporal lobar degeneration. Psychiatry research. vol 100. issue 1. 2001-01-03. PMID:11090722. neuropsychological testing revealed semantic dementia with severe anomia as well as apraxia with impairment of both recognition and production of motor acts. 2001-01-03 2023-08-12 Not clear
S Bozeat, M A Lambon Ralph, K Patterson, P Garrard, J R Hodge. Non-verbal semantic impairment in semantic dementia. Neuropsychologia. vol 38. issue 9. 2000-09-19. PMID:10865096. the clinical presentation of patients with semantic dementia is dominated by anomia and poor verbal comprehension. 2000-09-19 2023-08-12 Not clear
M A Lambon Ralph, K Sage, J Robert. Classical anomia: a neuropsychological perspective on speech production. Neuropsychologia. vol 38. issue 2. 2000-02-29. PMID:10660229. thorough assessment of comprehension, oral reading and repetition revealed no underlying impairments suggesting that both patients were examples of classical anomia--word-finding difficulties without impaired semantics or phonology. 2000-02-29 2023-08-12 Not clear
C Papagno, S Muggi. Naming people ignoring semantics in a patient with left frontal damage. Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior. vol 35. issue 4. 1999-12-22. PMID:10574079. studies about proper name anomia generally assume that persons' names are harder to recall than other semantic information one knows about them and that name retrieval is not possible without biographical knowledge. 1999-12-22 2023-08-12 Not clear
M L Greenwald, L J Gonzalez Roth. Lexical access via letter naming in a profoundly alexic and anomic patient: a treatment study. Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society : JINS. vol 4. issue 6. 1999-05-25. PMID:10050365. 's anomia for written letters reflected two loci of impairment within visual naming: impaired letter activation from print (a deficit commonly seen in pure alexic patients who read letter by letter) and impaired access to phonology via semantics (documented in a severe multimodality anomia). 1999-05-25 2023-08-12 Not clear
J R Hodges, K Patterson, R Ward, P Garrard, T Bak, R Perry, C Gregor. The differentiation of semantic dementia and frontal lobe dementia (temporal and frontal variants of frontotemporal dementia) from early Alzheimer's disease: a comparative neuropsychological study. Neuropsychology. vol 13. issue 1. 1999-05-20. PMID:10067773. a distinct profile emerged for each group: those with ad showed a severe deficit in episodic memory with more subtle, but significant, impairments in semantic memory and visuospatial skills; patients with semantic dementia showed the previously documented picture of isolated, but profound, semantic memory breakdown with anomia and surface dyslexia but were indistinguishable from the ad group on a test of story recall; and the dft group were the least impaired and showed mild deficits in episodic memory and verbal fluency but normal semantic memory. 1999-05-20 2023-08-12 Not clear
R Fukatsu, T Fujii, T Tsukiura, A Yamadori, T Otsuk. Proper name anomia after left temporal lobectomy: a patient study. Neurology. vol 52. issue 5. 1999-05-06. PMID:10102442. he showed proper name anomia in conversation, in response to photographs, and in verbal descriptions, despite being able to provide semantic information about the people he was unable to name. 1999-05-06 2023-08-12 Not clear
C J Mummery, K Patterson, R J Wise, R Vandenberghe, R Vandenbergh, C J Price, J R Hodge. Disrupted temporal lobe connections in semantic dementia. Brain : a journal of neurology. vol 122 ( Pt 1). 1999-03-30. PMID:10050895. semantic dementia refers to the variant of frontotemporal dementia in which there is progressive semantic deterioration and anomia in the face of relative preservation of other language and cognitive functions. 1999-03-30 2023-08-12 human
N Georgieff, P F Dominey, F Michel, M Marie-Cardine, J Daler. Anomia in major depressive state. Psychiatry research. vol 77. issue 3. 1998-11-06. PMID:9707302. anomia observed in depressives could thus be related to an impairment at the early stage of lexicalization or word production processes (pre-phonological item selection and access, or storage of the semantic lexical item in working memory for further phonological encoding), without lexical-semantic disorganization. 1998-11-06 2023-08-12 human
R M Lazar, R S Marshall, J Pile-Spellman, L Hacein-Bey, W L Young, J P Mohr, B M Stei. Anterior translocation of language in patients with left cerebral arteriovenous malformation. Neurology. vol 49. issue 3. 1997-10-10. PMID:9305344. a seventh patient with a frontal opercular avm had a mild anomia, semantic paraphasias, and decreased word-list generation when the prefrontal branch was injected. 1997-10-10 2023-08-12 Not clear