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Language as a stressor in aphasia

Authors
Cahana-Amitay, DaliaAlbert, Martin L.Pyun, Sung-BomWestwood, AndrewJenkins, TheodoreWolford, SarahFinley, Mallory
Issue Date
2011
Publisher
ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
Keywords
Aphasia; Anxiety; Language; Stress
Citation
APHASIOLOGY, v.25, no.5, pp.593 - 614
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
APHASIOLOGY
Volume
25
Number
5
Start Page
593
End Page
614
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/115014
DOI
10.1080/02687038.2010.541469
ISSN
0268-7038
Abstract
Background: Persons with aphasia often report feeling anxious when using language while communicating. While many patients, caregivers, clinicians, and researchers would agree that language might be a stressor for persons with aphasia, systematic empirical studies of stress and/or anxiety in aphasia remain scarce. Aim: The aim of this paper is to review the existing literature discussing language as a stressor in aphasia, identify key issues, highlight important gaps, and propose a programme for future study. In doing so we hope to underscore the importance of understanding aspects of the emotional aftermath of aphasia, which plays a critical role in the process of recovery and rehabilitation. Main Contribution: Post stroke emotional changes in persons with chronic aphasia clearly has adverse effects for language performance and prospects of recovery. However, the specific role anxiety might play in aphasia has yet to be determined. As a starting point, we propose to view language in aphasia as a stressor, linked to an emotional state we term olinguistic anxietyo. Specifically, a person with linguistic anxiety is one in whom the deliberate, effortful production of language involves anticipation of an error, with the imminence of linguistic failure serving as the threat. Since anticipation is psychologically linked to anxiety and also plays an important role in the allostatic system, we suggest that examining physiologic stress responses in persons with aphasia when they are asked to perform a linguistic task would be a productive tool for assessing the potential relation of stress to olinguistic anxietyo. Conclusions: Exploring the putative relationship between anxiety and language in aphasia, through the study of physiologic stress responses, could establish a platform for investigating language changes in the brain in other clinical populations, such as in individuals with Alzheimer's disease or persons with post-traumatic stress disorder, or even with healthy ageing persons, in whom olinguistic anxietyo might be at work when they have trouble finding words.
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