All Relations between Anomia and semantics

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
N Georgieff, P F Dominey, F Michel, M Marie-Cardine, J Daler. Anomia in major depressive state. Psychiatry research. vol 77. issue 3. 1998-11-06. PMID:9707302. anomia observed in depressives could thus be related to an impairment at the early stage of lexicalization or word production processes (pre-phonological item selection and access, or storage of the semantic lexical item in working memory for further phonological encoding), without lexical-semantic disorganization. 1998-11-06 2023-08-12 human
R M Lazar, R S Marshall, J Pile-Spellman, L Hacein-Bey, W L Young, J P Mohr, B M Stei. Anterior translocation of language in patients with left cerebral arteriovenous malformation. Neurology. vol 49. issue 3. 1997-10-10. PMID:9305344. a seventh patient with a frontal opercular avm had a mild anomia, semantic paraphasias, and decreased word-list generation when the prefrontal branch was injected. 1997-10-10 2023-08-12 Not clear
M Laine, E Vuorinen, J O Rinn. Picture naming deficits in vascular dementia and Alzheimer's disease. Journal of clinical and experimental neuropsychology. vol 19. issue 1. 1997-06-27. PMID:9071647. both dementia groups evidenced a semantic component in their anomia but the semantic deficit was more clearcut in the patients with ad than in the patients with vad even though the groups were matched on dementia severity. 1997-06-27 2023-08-12 Not clear
M Laine, E Vuorinen, J O Rinn. Picture naming deficits in vascular dementia and Alzheimer's disease. Journal of clinical and experimental neuropsychology. vol 19. issue 1. 1997-06-27. PMID:9071647. case-by-case analyses showed considerable performance variability but confirmed that when anomia is present, it commonly has a semantic component in both vad and ad. 1997-06-27 2023-08-12 Not clear
J D Greene, J R Hodge. The fractionation of remote memory. Evidence from a longitudinal study of dementia of Alzheimer type. Brain : a journal of neurology. vol 119 ( Pt 1). 1996-06-25. PMID:8624676. the declining performance on identification appeared to be due primarily to loss of semantic knowledge regarding famous persons, while retrieval a deficit contributed more significantly to the proper name anomia which was over and above the semantic deficit in dat. 1996-06-25 2023-08-12 Not clear
S Z Rapcsak, J F Comer, A B Ruben. Anomia for facial expressions: neuropsychological mechanisms and anatomical correlates. Brain and language. vol 45. issue 2. 1993-09-30. PMID:8358598. detailed investigation of this patient's deficit revealed that the neuropsychological mechanism underlying his anomia for facial expressions is best understood as a category-specific bidirectional visual-verbal disconnection between intact visual semantic and verbal semantic representations for facial emotions. 1993-09-30 2023-08-12 Not clear
J R Hodges, K Patterson, S Oxbury, E Funnel. Semantic dementia. Progressive fluent aphasia with temporal lobe atrophy. Brain : a journal of neurology. vol 115 ( Pt 6). 1993-02-24. PMID:1486461. we report five patients with a stereotyped clinical syndrome characterized by fluent dysphasia with severe anomia, reduced vocabulary and prominent impairment of single-word comprehension, progressing to a stage of virtually complete dissolution of the semantic components of language. 1993-02-24 2023-08-11 Not clear
M J Farah, M A Wallac. Semantically-bounded anomia: implications for the neural implementation of naming. Neuropsychologia. vol 30. issue 7. 1992-10-20. PMID:1528409. we discuss the phenomenon of semantically-bounded anomia in relation to the issues of local vs distributed representation, the existence of semantic "maps" in the brain, and the implementation of arbitrary associations in neural networks. 1992-10-20 2023-08-11 Not clear
E Funnell, J R Hodge. Progressive loss of access to spoken word forms in a case of Alzheimer's disease. Proceedings. Biological sciences. vol 243. issue 1307. 1991-08-06. PMID:1676521. the anomia cannot be attributed to a deficit within the semantic system, but appears instead to arise from impaired access to the phonological lexicon at a post-semantic stage of the naming process: a deficit that hitherto has not been reported in dat. 1991-08-06 2023-08-11 Not clear
V W Henderson, W Mack, D M Freed, D Kempler, E S Anderse. Naming consistency in Alzheimer's disease. Brain and language. vol 39. issue 4. 1991-04-24. PMID:2076494. although lexical semantic deficits are postulated to play a prominent role in the anomia of alzheimer's disease, it is unclear whether the primary disturbance is one of lexical access or one of lexical semantic loss. 1991-04-24 2023-08-11 Not clear
V W Henderson, W Mack, D M Freed, D Kempler, E S Anderse. Naming consistency in Alzheimer's disease. Brain and language. vol 39. issue 4. 1991-04-24. PMID:2076494. findings support the hypothesis that anomia in alzheimer's disease is in part due to a loss of lexical semantic information. 1991-04-24 2023-08-11 Not clear
G Le Dorze, J L Nespoulou. Anomia in moderate aphasia: problems in accessing the lexical representation. Brain and language. vol 37. issue 3. 1989-11-30. PMID:2804620. results support the view that aphasic anomia originates from a difficulty in accessing the formal lexical representation and not from a semantic problem. 1989-11-30 2023-08-11 human
R Lesse. Selective preservation of oral spelling without semantics in a case of multi-infarct dementia. Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior. vol 25. issue 2. 1989-09-11. PMID:2758850. a 70 year old retired van driver, with a diagnosis of multi-infarct dementia, showed features associated with transcortical sensory aphasia, with excellent repetition, a severe anomia, poor semantic comprehension and fluent speech. 1989-09-11 2023-08-11 Not clear
M F Mehle. Mixed transcortical aphasia in nonfamilial dysphasic dementia. Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior. vol 24. issue 4. 1989-03-21. PMID:3219869. a combined paraphasic word-production and semantic anomia was found. 1989-03-21 2023-08-11 Not clear
U Hadar, C Jones, C Mate-Kol. The disconnection in anomic aphasia between semantic and phonological lexicons. Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior. vol 23. issue 3. 1987-12-18. PMID:3677737. her anomia shows exceptional features: it occurs in naming tasks in test conditions but not in continuous speech; it involves comprehension deficits but very few semantic errors in expression; it improves with phonemic, but not with semantic cues. 1987-12-18 2023-08-11 Not clear
G Gainotti, M C Silveri, G Villa, G Micel. Anomia with and without lexical comprehension disorders. Brain and language. vol 29. issue 1. 1986-10-30. PMID:3756458. in "anomia with lexical comprehension disturbances" the locus of defect seems to be much deeper within the lexicon, so that the semantic disorder affects both the expressive and the receptive levels in a roughly comparable manner. 1986-10-30 2023-08-11 Not clear
F J Huff, S Corkin, J H Growdo. Semantic impairment and anomia in Alzheimer's disease. Brain and language. vol 28. issue 2. 1986-09-16. PMID:3730816. semantic impairment and anomia in alzheimer's disease. 1986-09-16 2023-08-11 Not clear
G Gainotti, G Miceli, C Caltagirone, M C Silveri, C Masull. The relationship between type of naming error and semantic-lexical discrimination in aphasic patients. Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior. vol 17. issue 3. 1982-05-12. PMID:7333113. when submitted to confrontation naming tasks, aphasic patients show different types of naming errors: phonetic, phonemic and verbal-semantic paraphasias, neologisms and anomia, but it is generally difficult to decide whether these errors are mainly due to a breakdown of the semantic systems or to post-lexical phonological disorders. 1982-05-12 2023-08-12 Not clear
G Gainotti, G Miceli, C Caltagirone, M C Silveri, C Masull. The relationship between type of naming error and semantic-lexical discrimination in aphasic patients. Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior. vol 17. issue 3. 1982-05-12. PMID:7333113. the performances on semantic discrimination tests of patients showing a prevalence of phonetic, phonemic and verbal-semantic paraphasias, neologisms and anomia on confrontation naming tasks were compared. 1982-05-12 2023-08-12 Not clear
G Gainotti, G Miceli, C Caltagirone, M C Silveri, C Masull. The relationship between type of naming error and semantic-lexical discrimination in aphasic patients. Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior. vol 17. issue 3. 1982-05-12. PMID:7333113. a very small number of semantic discrimination errors was obtained by patients showing a prevalence of phonetic and phonemic transformations on confrontation, whereas a much larger number of semantic discrimination errors was obtained by patients showing a prevalence of verbal-semantic paraphasias, neologisms and anomia. 1982-05-12 2023-08-12 Not clear