Language processes in healthy and language impaired older people

By: Dr. J. Maxim

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Index

Language processes in healthy and language impaired older people

Who are ‘older people’?

Demographic information

Normal Ageing

Spectrum of change - from normal to pathological ageing - from a narrower range of variation in the young elderly to a wide range of variation in the old elderly - from single cause communication disorders to multiple causation

Factors in ageing communication

Misconceptions about Ageing

Research shows

Methodological issues:

Speech and language therapists need:

Language processes in:

Normal ageing Alzheimer’s disease

Language processing in the normally ageing population

What does research tell us about language comprehension?

Sentence processing

Information coded in complex grammatical structures is more difficult to process

Recall from paragraphs may decrease, depending on the type of information

Older people make increased use of contextual information

Tentative conclusion:

What does research tell us about language production?

Clause structure

Phrase structure

Coordination/Subordination

Are errors common in the language of older people?

Common error types

Language monitoring and repair

Complex Language structures:

Continued…

Discourse

Tentative conclusion:

Alzheimer’s disease: A key research question

Warrington & Shallice (1979) set up 4 criteria to differentiate an access deficit from a degraded store deficit:

Consistency

Priming

Consistency

Priming

Implications for intervention

So………..