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result(s) for
"Speeded naming"
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The MINT Sprint: Exploring a Fast Administration Procedure with an Expanded Multilingual Naming Test
2022
The present study examined if time-pressured administration of an expanded Multilingual Naming Test (MINT) would improve or compromise assessment of bilingual language proficiency and language dominance.
Eighty Spanish-English bilinguals viewed a grid with 80 MINT-Sprint pictures and were asked to name as many pictures as possible in 3 min in each language in counterbalanced order. An Oral Proficiency Interview rated by four native Spanish-English bilinguals provided independent assessment of proficiency level. Bilinguals also self-rated their proficiency, completed two subtests of the Woodcock-Muñoz, and a speeded translation recognition test. We compared scores after 2 min, a first-pass through all the pictures, and a second-pass in which bilinguals were prompted to try to name skipped items.
The MINT Sprint and a subset score including original MINT items were highly correlated with Oral Proficiency Interview scores for predicting the degree of language dominance - matching or outperforming all other measures. Self-ratings provided weaker measures (especially of degree of balance - i.e., bilingual index scores) and did not explain any unique variance in measuring the degree of language dominance when considered together with second-pass naming scores. The 2-min scoring procedure did not improve and appeared not to hamper assessment of absolute proficiency level but prompting to try to name skipped items improved assessment of language dominance and naming scores, especially in the nondominant language.
Time-pressured rapid naming saves time without significantly compromising assessment of proficiency level. However, breadth of vocabulary knowledge may be as important as retrieval speed for maximizing the accuracy in proficiency assessment.
Journal Article
The MINT Sprint 2.0: A picture naming test for detection of naming impairments in Alzheimer's disease and in preclinical AD
by
Galasko, Douglas
,
Kim, Chi
,
Salmon, David P.
in
Aging
,
Alzheimer Disease - cerebrospinal fluid
,
Alzheimer's disease
2024
INTRODUCTION Evidence on the onset of naming deficits in Alzheimer's disease (AD) is mixed. Some studies showed an early decline, but others did not. The present study introduces evidence from a novel naming test. METHODS Cognitively normal (n = 138), mild cognitive impairment (MCI; n = 21), and Alzheimer's disease (AD; n = 31) groups completed an expanded Multilingual Naming Test with a time‐pressured administration procedure (MINT Sprint 2.0). Cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers classified participants as true controls (n = 61) or preclinical AD (n = 26). RESULTS Total correct MINT Sprint 2.0 scores exhibited good sensitivity and specificity (>0.85) for discriminating true controls from cognitively impaired (MCI/AD) groups and showed significant differences between true controls and preclinical AD groups. Time measurement did not improve classification, but percent resolved scores exhibited promise as an independent AD marker. DISCUSSION Naming deficits can be detected in the earliest stages of AD with tests and procedures designed for this purpose.
Journal Article
Pre-reading language abilities and the brain’s functional reading network in young children
2020
Early childhood is an important period for language development that lays the foundation for future reading abilities. However, little research has focused on the functional brain systems supporting pre-reading language abilities in typically developing children. Here, we investigated functional connectivity using passive viewing functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in 50 healthy children aged 2.85–5.07 years (3.84 ± 0.60 years, 22 female/28 male). Children completed the NEPSY-II Phonological Processing and Speeded Naming subtests and underwent fMRI while watching a movie of their choice. Functional connectivity was measured between key brain reading areas (bilateral angular gyrus, superior temporal gyrus, and inferior frontal gyrus) and the rest of the brain. Age-adjusted pre-reading scores positively correlated with functional connectivity between (1) the right angular gyrus and superior temporal gyrus, (2) the bilateral angular gyri and right pars triangularis and motor areas, (3) the left superior temporal gyrus and bilateral medial frontal gyrus and right cerebellum, (4) the left pars triangularis and middle occipital gyrus and insula, and (5) the right pars triangularis and the bilateral thalamus. Higher pre-reading scores were associated with stronger negative functional connectivity between (1) the left angular gyrus and auditory cortex, (2) the left superior temporal gyrus and occipital vision areas, (3) the right pars triangularis and medial frontal region, and (4) the right superior temporal gyrus and the posterior cingulate/precuneus. These results suggest better integration of the reading network, as well as its connections with other brain areas that support language or reading, and more dissociation between reading areas and the default mode network, in young children with better pre-reading skills. Our findings show that relationships between functional connectivity and pre-reading language skills are evident in young children even before formal reading instruction.
•We acquired passive viewing fMRI and assessed pre-reading in 50 children aged 2-5.•Functional connectivity was measured from three key reading areas bilaterally.•Better pre-reading predicted stronger connectivity among reading areas.•Pre-reading positively associated with connectivity between reading and motor areas.•Better scores were related to decreased connectivity with visual and default mode areas.
Journal Article
Functional magnetic resonance imaging study of children's brain development in phonological processing and speeded naming
2023
The brain structure and language skills of children are understood to be in a phase of rapid development and are especially represented by key phonological‐semantic expressions that actively develop with age. In the present study, resting‐state functional magnetic resonance imaging data from 85 healthy children were retrospectively analyzed. Correlations of the phonological processing and speeded naming of specific brain regions of interest with age were assessed using the fractional amplitude of low‐frequency fluctuations (fALFF), degree centrality (DC), regional homogeneity (ReHo), and chain mediation effect analysis. Our results suggest that the developmental stages of children's posterior cingulate gyrus (PCC) and right inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) mediate language development in children. Additionally, the functional similarity of the bilateral IFG triangular part was noted during development as was the stronger activation and higher local and whole‐brain connectivity of the left IFG triangular part. Moreover, the PCC displayed stronger activation and higher local connectivity in the same period. Our data suggest that the development of the PCC and right IFG and the similarity of bilateral IFG function are important imaging markers of phonological processing and speeded naming in children and that the PCC and IFG show a more comprehensive development with age. Mediation effect analysis revealed that the fMRI imaging multivariate features of the inferior frontal gyrus as well as the posterior cingulate gyrus developed with age in children aged 2–8 years, resulting in higher phonological processing and speeded naming scores in children.
Journal Article
The orthographic similarity structure of English words: Insights from network science
by
Siew, Cynthia S. Q.
in
Acknowledgment
,
Complexity
,
Computer Appl. in Social and Behavioral Sciences
2018
Network science has been applied to study the structure of the mental lexicon, the part of long-term memory where all the words a person knows are stored. Here the tools of network science are used to study the organization of
orthographic
word-forms in the mental lexicon and how that might influence visual word recognition. An orthographic similarity network of the English language was constructed such that each node represented an English word, and undirected, unweighted edges were placed between words that differed by an edit distance of 1, a commonly used operationalization of orthographic similarity in psycholinguistics. The largest connected component of the orthographic language network had a small-world structure and a long-tailed degree distribution. Additional analyses were conducted using behavioral data obtained from a psycholinguistic database to determine if network science measures obtained from the orthographic language network could be used to predict how quickly and accurately people process written words. The present findings show that the structure of the mental lexicon influences lexical access in visual word recognition.
Journal Article
Correlates of Chinese kindergarteners’ word reading and writing: the unique role of copying skills?
by
Wang, Ying
,
Chan, Shing Fong
,
McBride-Chang, Catherine
in
Alphabets
,
Character Recognition
,
Children
2014
Ninety-four Mainland Chinese children in the second and third years of kindergarten (mean age = 65 months,
SD
= 6.94) were tested on Pinyin letter-name knowledge, invented Pinyin spelling, general copying skills of unfamiliar print (in Korean, Hebrew and Vietnamese, ultimately combined to create a pure copying factor), delayed copying of characters, nonverbal reasoning, vocabulary knowledge, speeded number-naming, syllable deletion, and morphological awareness in order to examine unique correlates of beginning Chinese word reading and writing, which were also tested. With age, kindergarten level, and nonverbal reasoning statistically controlled, morphological awareness, speeded naming, and Pinyin letter-name knowledge uniquely explained Chinese word reading, whereas both the pure copying factor and delayed copying independently explained 11 and 5 % variance in Chinese word writing, respectively. Findings suggest a somewhat independent trajectory of developing word reading and writing skills in very young Chinese children and highlight the potential importance of both print-dependent and print-independent copying skills for the development of early word writing skill in Chinese.
Journal Article
Dyslexic and skilled reading dynamics are self-similar
by
Holden, John G.
,
van Rooij, Marieke M. J. W.
,
Greijn, Lieke T.
in
Adolescent
,
Age differences
,
Arithmetic
2014
The shape of a word pronunciation time distribution supplies information about the dynamic interactions that support reading performance. Speeded word-naming pronunciation and response time distributions were collected from 20 sixth grade Dutch students with dyslexia and 23 age-matched controls. The participants' pronunciation times were modeled and contrasted with a lognormal inverse power-law mixture distribution. Identical contrasts were also conducted on the same participants' response time distributions derived from flanker, color-naming, and arithmetic tasks. Results indicated that children with dyslexia yield slower, broader, and more variable pronunciation time distributions than their age-matched counterparts. This difference approximated a self-similar rescaling between the two group's aggregate pronunciation time distributions. Moreover, children with dyslexia produced similar, but less prominent trends toward slower and more variable performance across the three non-reading tasks. The outcomes support a proportional continuum rather than a localized deficit account of dyslexia. The mixture distribution's success at describing the participants' pronunciation and response time distributions suggests that differences in proportional contingencies among low-level neurophysiological, perceptual, and cognitive processes likely play a prominent role in the etiology of dyslexia.
Journal Article