Neural correlates of longitudinal recovery of naming in stroke

Sunday, October 18 8:00-9:00 Breakfast & Registration 9:00-11:00 Platform Session 1: Processes of Word Production 11:00-11:30 Coffee Break 11:30-1:00 Platform Session 2: Functional Connectivity and Neuroplasticity 1:00-2:30 Box Lunch Special Event: An Hour with Audrey Holland – for those new to the field 2:30-4:30 Symposium 1: Neural Correlates of Recovery and Rehabilitation 4:30-6:00 Coffee Break & Poster Session 1 6:00-7:45 Business Meeting


DETAILED SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM
Testing the "division of labor hypothesis" of aphasic verb production using bigdata Julia Thorne and Yasmeen Faroqi-Shah 39.Verb argument structure in narrative speech: Mining the AphasiaBank Dirk B. Den Ouden, Svetlana Malyutina and Jessica D. Richardson 40.Using big-data to validate theories of rehabilitation in aphasia Swathi Kiran and Carrie A. Des Roches 2Semantic feature analysis (SFA) in the treatment of naming deficits: Evidence from a Malay speaker with non-fluent aphasia Mohd Azmarul A Aziz and Rogayah A Razak 42.Semantic feature verification: Adults with stroke-aphasia and neurologicallyhealthy adults Sharon M. Antonucci 43.Patterns of orthographic working memory impairments in acquired dysgraphia in adults: A case series analysis Venugopal Balasubramanian, Maha A. Aldera and Maureen Costello 44.Eyetracking reveals aberrant visual search during confrontation naming of Alzheimer's disease and primary progressive aphasia Ashley Bauer, Jinyi Hung, Murray Grossman and Jamie Reilly 45.The intractability of non-word production difficulties in jargon aphasia: Insights from therapy Arpita Bose, Fiona Höbler, Catherine Godbold and Doug Saddy 46.The role of executive function in the semantic comprehension deficits of stroke aphasia and semantic dementia Curtiss Chapman and Randi Martin 47. Investigating the possibility of a syntactic impairment in the semantic variant of PPA using a constrained production task: Preliminary findings Jennifer Cupit, Carol Leonard, Naida Graham, Bruna Seixas Lima, David Tang-Wai, Sandra Black and Elizabeth Rochon 48.Whole-word response scoring underestimates functional spelling ability for some individuals with global agraphia Andrew T. Demarco, Kindle Rising, Christine Shultz, Chelsea Bayley and Pelagie M. Beeson 49.The cognate advantage in bilingual aphasia: Now you see it, now you don't Emma Hughes and Marie-Josephe Tainturier 50.Please don't stop the music: Song completion in patients with aphasia Anna V. Kasdan, Matthew Vera and Swathi Kiran 51.The feasibility of using pupillometry to measure cognitive effort in aphasia: Evidence from a working memory span task Esther S. Kim and Salima Suleman 52.Treatment-induced neuroplasticity following intensive speech therapy and a home practice program in fifteen cases of chronic aphasia Jacquie Kurland, Polly Stokes and Thomas Zeffiro 53.Neural correlates of individual differences in processing of rising tones in Cantonese: Implications for speech perception and production Sampo Law and Jinghua Ou 54.Effects of aging, aphasia, and Parkinson's disease on the time course of lemma selection during sentence production: Evidence from eyetracking Jiyeon Lee 55.Measuring prosodic deficits in oral discourse by speakers with fluent aphasia Tan Lee, Anthony Pak Hin Kong and Wang-Kong Lam 56.Spontaneous speech: Quantifying daily communication in Spanish-speaking individuals with aphasia Silvia Martínez-Ferreiro, Elena Vares González and Roelien Bastiaanse 57.Implicit learning and its role in treatment of sentence deficits in aphasia Julia Schuchard, Michaela Nerantzini and Cynthia Thompson 1Now you are with me, now you are not: Between-session and within-session intraindividual variability in attention in aphasia Sarah Villard and Swathi Kiran 88.Evaluating proposed dorsal and ventral route functions in speech perception and phonological short-term memory: Evidence from aphasia Heather R. Dial and Randi Martin 89.Selection demands and working memory mediate interference during naming Julie W. Hughes and Tatiana T. Schnur 90.Bilingual aphasia: Language matters Brendan Weekes

Spatio-temporal dynamics of word selection in speech production: Insights from electrocorticography
Stephanie K. Ries, Rummit K. Dhillon, Alex D. Clarke, David King-Stephen, Kenneth D. Laxer, Peter Weber, Rachel Kuperman, Kurtis I. Auguste, Peter Brunner, Gerwin Schalk, Jack J. Lin, Josef Parvizi, Nathan E. Crone, Nina F. Dronkers and Robert T. Knight 4. Towards a theory of learning for naming rehabilitation: Retrieval practice, retrieval effort, and spacing effects Erica Middleton and Hilary Traut 11:

Functional reorganization of the large-scale brain networks that support high-level cognition following brain damage in aphasia
Idan A. Blank, Sofia V. Rohter, Swathi Kiran and Evelina Fedorenko   7.

13. Investigating the role of linguistic and attentional processes in lexicality judgements in Alzheimer's disease Nancy
Azevedo, Eva Kehayia, Ruth Ann Atchley and Vasavan N. Nair 14. Preserved cumulative semantic interference despite amnesia Gary M. Oppenheim, Marie-Josephe Tainturier and Polly Barr 15.Grammatical production deficits in PPA: Relating narrative and structured task performance Elena Barbieri, Jennifer E. Mack, Sarah Chandler, M.-Marsel Mesulam and Cynthia Thompson 16.Verb morphology impairment in a bilingual speaker with non-fluent aphasia Katy Borodkin and Mira Goral 17. Cognitive outcome after awake surgery for left and right hemisphere tumours Elke De Witte, Djaina Satoer, Evy Visch-Brink and Peter Mariën 18.A comparison of processing load during non-verbal decision-making in two individuals with aphasia Salima Suleman, Esther S. Kim and Tammy Hopper 19.Grammatical category mediates the bilingual disadvantage in word retrieval Yasmeen Faroqi-Shah and Lisa Milman 20.Production of subject-verb agreement, tense, mood, and negation in Italian agrammatic aphasia Valantis Fyndanis, Carlo Semenza, Rita Capasso, Marialuisa Gandolfi, Serena De Pellegrin, Giorgio Arcara, Francesca Burgio, Anna Maculan, Nicola Smania and Gabriele Miceli 21.Using lexical variables to predict picture-naming errors in jargon aphasia Catherine Godbold, Lotte Meteyard, Carmel Houston-Price and Arpita Bose 22.

Prediction of arguments and adjuncts in aphasia: Effects of event-related and verb-specific knowledge
Rebecca A. Hayes, Michael W. Dickey and Tessa Warren23.Structural prediction in aphasiaChia-Ming Lei, Tessa Warren and Michael W. Dickey24.Phonological rehabilitation in acquired aphasiaClaudio Luzzatti, Alessandra L. Molinari, Maria Ester Zanobio and Gabriella Rizzi 25.

Do morphophonological rules impact both regular and irregular verb inflection? Evidence from acquired morphological impairment Stacey Rimikis and Adam Buchwald 27. Examining durability and generalization following lexical retrieval treatment in an individual with semantic variant of primary progressive aphasia
Kindle Rising and Pelagie M. Beeson 28.

What do pause patterns in non-fluent aphasia tell us about monitoring speech? A study of morpho-syntactic complexity, accuracy and fluency in agrammatic sentence and connected discourse production
Halima Sahraoui, Julie Mauclair, Lorraine Baqué and Jean-Luc Nespoulous

Verb representations are closely associated with syntactic constructions in sentence production: Evidence from aphasic patients with short-term memory deficits
Hao Yan, Randi C. Martin and L. Robert Slevc 32.Electrophysiology of sentence processing in aphasia: Prosodic cues and thematic fit Shannon M. Sheppard, Katherine J. Midgley, Tracy Love, Dorothy Yang, Phillip J. Holcomb and Lewis P. Shapiro