There is broad consensus as to the significance of speech errors in aphasia. The analysis of errors is understood to provide clear clues for clinical diagnosis, the identification of those cognitive-linguistic processes affected, and the corresponding impaired cerebral structures. However, Stimulus Type Effect on Phonological and Semantic errors (STEPS), a phenomenon in which a person with aphasia produces more phonological errors with words (e.g., "tamle" for "table") but more semantic errors with number words (e.g., "thirteen" for "forty-two"), casts doubt on this consensus view. In this paper two studies are described, in which we explore whether STEPS is in fact a result of the lack of rigorous control over the materials compared (words versus numbers) and the evaluation conditions. Two persons, one with a reproduction conduction aphasia and the other with a repetition conduction aphasia, participated in the studies. Study 1 explored the role of memory load in the emergence of STEPS by eliciting the repetition of pairs of semantically-unrelated words. In Studies 2a and 2b, our participants were asked to produce sequences of high- and low-frequency words from one semantic category (colors), and this was compared to the performance in multi-digit number production tasks. The results showed that sequences of high-frequency colors, like multi-digit numbers, were produced mainly with semantic errors, whereas sequences of low-frequency colors showed a mixed pattern with many phonemic and semantic errors. It seems that the production of semantic errors and the absence of phonemic errors in multi-digit numbers that give rise to STEPS is an experimental artifact caused by the combination of several factors: the use of semantically-related high-frequency words, produced cyclically under high-memory-demand conditions. These findings contribute substantially to the current discussion of language production models and allow for a deeper understanding of the neurocognitive processes that underly speech errors in aphasia.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cortex.2025.02.005 | DOI Listing |
Front Robot AI
February 2025
Center for Robotics, University of Bonn, Bonn, Germany.
Robust perception systems allow farm robots to recognize weeds and vegetation, enabling the selective application of fertilizers and herbicides to mitigate the environmental impact of traditional agricultural practices. Today's perception systems typically rely on deep learning to interpret sensor data for tasks such as distinguishing soil, crops, and weeds. These approaches usually require substantial amounts of manually labeled training data, which is often time-consuming and requires domain expertise.
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February 2025
Numerical Cognition Lab, Universidad de Málaga, Spain; Department of Basic Psychology, Universidad de Málaga, Spain; Instituto de Investigación Biomédica de Málaga (IBIMA), Spain.
There is broad consensus as to the significance of speech errors in aphasia. The analysis of errors is understood to provide clear clues for clinical diagnosis, the identification of those cognitive-linguistic processes affected, and the corresponding impaired cerebral structures. However, Stimulus Type Effect on Phonological and Semantic errors (STEPS), a phenomenon in which a person with aphasia produces more phonological errors with words (e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIEEE Trans Vis Comput Graph
March 2025
Considering the issue of privacy leakage and motivating more sophisticated protection methods for air-typing with XR devices, in this paper, we propose AirtypeLogger, a new approach towards practical video-based attacks on the air-typing activities of XR users in virtual space. Different from the existing approaches, AirtypeLogger considers a scenario in which the users are typing a short text fragment with semantic meaning occasionally under the spy of video cameras. It detects and localizes the air-typing events in video streams and proposes the spatial-temporal representation to encode the keystrokes' relative positions and temporal order.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: Reports an error in "Cardiovascular health and rate of cognitive decline in preclinical dementia: A 12-year population-based study" by Andreja Speh, Nicola Maria Payton, Milica G. Kramberger, Giulia Grande, Chengxuan Qiu, Bengt Winblad, Laura Fratiglioni, Lars Bäckman and Erika J. Laukka (, 2024[Mar], Vol 38[3], 211-222).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Psychophysiol
March 2025
Computer Science Department, CUCEI, Universidad de Guadalajara, Blvd. Marcelino García Barragán 1421, Olímpica, 44430 Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico. Electronic address:
Spanish is a transparent language with a high degree of consistency of print-speech correspondences, thus facilitating written word recognition. However, most of the orthographic errors in Spanish do not alter the phonological representation of the words, thus leading to potential conflicts with their visual portrayal in memory. This study explored whether spelling errors affect semantic processing by analyzing the behavioral and electrophysiological effects during sentence reading in 35 native Spanish-speaking young adults.
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