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Variables that influence binomial completion (Eaton & Newman, 2018)

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posted on 2018-04-18, 18:04 authored by Catherine Torrington Eaton, Rochelle S. Newman
Purpose: The goal of this research was to institute an evidence base behind commonly used elicitation materials known as binomials (e.g., “day and night”) that are commonly used for persons with aphasia (PWAs). The study explored a number of linguistic variables that could influence successful binomial completion in nonaphasic adults and PWAs.
Method: Thirty nonaphasic adults and 11 PWAs were asked to verbally complete 128 binomials; responses were scored by accuracy and reaction time. Binomials were coded according to the following independent variables: frequency of usage, phonological (e.g., alliteration, rhyme) and semantic (i.e., antonymy) relationships, grammatical category of the response, and number of plausible binomial completions.
Results: Regression analyses demonstrated that, for both groups, greater accuracy was predicted by presence of antonymy and absence of a phonological relationship. Though reaction time models differed between groups, items that elicited a greater number of response options led to longer latencies across participants.
Conclusion: Findings suggest that clinicians consider antonymy as well as the number of plausible responses for a given prompt when adapting the level of difficulty for their clients. Results also contribute to broader interdisciplinary research on how automatic language is processed in adults with and without neurogenic communication disorder.

Supplemental Material S1. List of binomials.

Supplemental Material S2. Sample coding of binomials.

Eaton, C. T., & Newman, R. S. (2018). Heart and ____ or give and ____? An exploration of variables that influence binomial completion for individuals with and without aphasia. American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 27, 819–826. https://doi.org/10.1044/2018_AJSLP-17-0071

Funding

This work was conducted while the first author was supported under National Science Foundation Grant BCS 0745412 and the Ann G. Wiley graduate dissertation fellowship at the University of Maryland. The NSF grant was awarded to the second author. All other grants/fellowships were awarded to the first author.

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