Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience (Jan 2021)

Using a Discourse Task to Explore Semantic Ability in Persons With Cognitive Impairment

  • Malin Antonsson,
  • Malin Antonsson,
  • Kristina Lundholm Fors,
  • Kristina Lundholm Fors,
  • Marie Eckerström,
  • Dimitrios Kokkinakis,
  • Dimitrios Kokkinakis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnagi.2020.607449
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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This paper uses a discourse task to explore aspects of semantic production in persons with various degree of cognitive impairment and healthy controls. The purpose of the study was to test if an in-depth semantic analysis of a cognitive-linguistic challenging discourse task could differentiate persons with a cognitive decline from those with a stable cognitive impairment. Both quantitative measures of semantic ability, using tests of oral lexical retrieval, and qualitative analysis of a narrative were used to detect semantic difficulties. Besides group comparisons a classification experiment was performed to investigate if the discourse features could be used to improve classification of the participants who had a stable cognitive impairment from those who had cognitively declined. In sum, both types of assessment methods captured difficulties between the groups, but tests of oral lexical retrieval most successfully differentiated between the cognitively stable and the cognitively declined group. Discourse features improved classification accuracy and the best combination of features discriminated between participants with a stable cognitive impairment and those who had cognitively declined with an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.93.

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