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Behavioural Neurology logoLink to Behavioural Neurology
. 2005 Jan 27;15(3-4):87–97. doi: 10.1155/2004/974094

Test-Retest Reliability of fMRI During Nonverbal Semantic Decisions in Moderate-Severe Nonfluent Aphasia Patients

Jacquie Kurland 1,2,*, Margaret A Naeser 1,2, Errol H Baker 1, Karl Doron 1, Paula I Martin 1, Heidi E Seekins 1, Andrew Bogdan 1, Perry Renshaw 3, Deborah Yurgelun-Todd 3
PMCID: PMC1434895  NIHMSID: NIHMS5742  PMID: 15706052

Abstract

Cortical reorganization in poststroke aphasia is not well understood. Few studies have investigated neural mechanisms underlying language recovery in severe aphasia patients, who are typically viewed as having a poor prognosis for language recovery. Although test-retest reliability is routinely demonstrated during collection of language data in single-subject aphasia research, this is rarely examined in fMRI studies investigating the underlying neural mechanisms in aphasia recovery.

The purpose of this study was to acquire fMRI test-retest data examining semantic decisions both within and between two aphasia patients. Functional MRI was utilized to image individuals with chronic, moderate-severe nonfluent aphasia during nonverbal, yes/no button-box semantic judgments of iconic sentences presented in the Computer-assisted Visual Communication (C-ViC) program. We investigated the critical issue of intra-subject reliability by exploring similarities and differences in regions of activation during participants' performance of identical tasks twice on the same day. Each participant demonstrated high intra-subject reliability, with response decrements typical of task familiarity. Differences between participants included greater left hemisphere perilesional activation in the individual with better response to C-ViC training. This study provides fMRI reliability in chronic nonfluent aphasia, and adds to evidence supporting differences in individual cortical reorganization in aphasia recovery.

Keywords: nonfluent aphasia, fMRI reliability, nonverbal semantic decisions


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