Intellectual Awareness of Naming Abilities in People with Chronic Post-Stroke Aphasia. - 2021

Anosognosia, or general lack of self-awareness, is often present following neurological injury and can result in poor functional outcomes. The specific phenomenon of intellectual awareness, the knowledge that a function is impaired in oneself, has not been widely studied in post-stroke aphasia. We aim to identify behavioral and neural correlates of intellectual awareness by comparing stroke survivors' self-reports of anomia to objective naming performance and examining lesion sites. Fifty-three participants with chronic aphasia without severe comprehension deficits rated their naming ability and completed a battery of behavioral tests. We calculated the reliability and accuracy of participant self-ratings, then examined the relationship of poor intellectual awareness to speech, language, and cognitive measures. We used support vector regression lesion-symptom mapping (SVR-LSM) to determine lesion locations associated with impaired and preserved intellectual awareness. Reliability and accuracy of self-ratings varied across the participants. Poor intellectual awareness was associated with reduced performance on tasks that rely on semantics. Our SVR-LSM results demonstrated that anterior inferior frontal lesions were associated with poor awareness, while mid-superior temporal lesions were associated with preserved awareness. An anterior-posterior gradient was evident in the unthresholded lesion-symptom maps. While many people with chronic aphasia and relatively intact comprehension can accurately and reliably report the severity of their anomia, others overestimate, underestimate, or inconsistently estimate their naming abilities. Clinicians should consider this when administering self-rating scales, particularly when semantic deficits or anterior inferior frontal lesions are present. Administering self-ratings on multiple days may be useful to check the reliability of patient perceptions. Copyright (c) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.


English

10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2021.107961 [doi] S0028-3932(21)00214-1 [pii]


*Aphasia
*Stroke
Aphasia/dg [Diagnostic Imaging]
Aphasia/et [Etiology]
Brain Mapping
Humans
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Reproducibility of Results
Semantics
Stroke/co [Complications]


MedStar National Rehabilitation Network


Journal Article