Language | German |
Inclusion criteria | — |
Number of individuals with aphasia | 6 |
Number of control participants | 6 |
Were any of the participants included in any previous studies? | No |
Is age reported for patients and controls, and matched? | Yes (range 33-66 years) |
Is sex reported for patients and controls, and matched? | Yes (males: 4; females: 2) |
Is handedness reported for patients and controls, and matched? | Yes (right: 6; left: 0) |
Is time post stroke onset reported and appropriate to the study design? | Yes (T1: ~4 weeks; T2: ~12-18 months) |
To what extent is the nature of aphasia characterized? | Severity only |
Language evaluation | Verbal repetition, confrontation naming, oral and written comprehension, reading abilities, TT, phonemic fluency, clinical impression, family interview |
Aphasia severity | T1: TT range 37-48; T2: TT range 3-39 (1 missing) |
Aphasia type | T1: 5 global, 1 Wernicke's; T2: not stated |
First stroke only? | Yes |
Stroke type | Ischemic only |
To what extent is the lesion distribution characterized? | Individual lesions |
Lesion extent | Range 27.2-133.2 cc |
Lesion location | L MCA; 5 patients had superior temporal damage and 1 had subcortical damage underlying posterior superior temporal cortex |
Participants notes | — |
Modality | PET (rCMRgl) |
Is the study cross-sectional or longitudinal? | Longitudinal—recovery |
If longitudinal, at what time point(s) were imaging data acquired? | T1: ~4 weeks; T2: ~12-18 months |
If longitudinal, was there any intervention between the time points? | Not stated |
Is the scanner described? | Yes (Siemens ECAT EXACT HR) |
Is the timing of stimulus presentation and image acquisition clearly described and appropriate? | Yes |
Design type | PET |
Total images acquired | 2 |
Are the imaging acquisition parameters, including coverage, adequately described and appropriate? | Yes (whole brain) |
Is preprocessing and intrasubject coregistration adequately described and appropriate? | Yes |
Is first level model fitting adequately described and appropriate? | Yes |
Is intersubject normalization adequately described and appropriate? | N/A—no intersubject normalization |
Imaging notes | — |
Language condition | Word repetition |
Control condition | Rest |
Are the conditions matched for visual demands? | Yes |
Are the conditions matched for auditory demands? | No |
Are the conditions matched for motor demands? | No |
Are the conditions matched for cognitive/executive demands? | No |
Is accuracy matched between the language and control tasks for all relevant groups? | N/A, tasks not comparable |
Is reaction time matched between the language and control tasks for all relevant groups? | N/A, tasks not comparable |
Behavioral data notes | — |
Are control data reported in this paper or another that is referenced? | Somewhat |
Does the contrast selectively activate plausible relevant language regions in the control group? | Unknown |
Are activations lateralized in the control data? | No |
Control activation notes | The only control data is extent of activation and mean signal increase in L and R superior temporal cortex; both of these measures were slightly L-lateralized |
Contrast notes | — |
First level contrast | Word repetition vs rest |
Analysis class | Longitudinal between two groups with aphasia |
Group(s) | (Aphasia with good recovery (n = 3) T2 vs T1) vs (aphasia with poor recovery (n = 3) T2 vs T1) |
Covariate | — |
Is the second level contrast valid in terms of the group(s), time point(s), and measures involved? | Somewhat (TT not optimal measure of overall language function) |
Is accuracy matched across the second level contrast? | Unknown, not reported |
Is reaction time matched across the second level contrast? | Unknown, not reported |
Behavioral data notes | — |
Type of analysis | Voxelwise |
Search volume | Whole brain |
Correction for multiple comparisons | No direct comparison |
Software | not stated |
Voxelwise p | — |
Cluster extent | — |
Statistical details | Qualitative generalization across individuals on pp. 214-6 |
Findings | ↑ L posterior STG/STS/MTG ↓ R posterior STG/STS/MTG |
Findings notes | The consistent aspects of the findings were that there was an emergence of L posterior temporal activation in patients with better recovery, and R posterior temporal activation in patients with worse recovery |
First level contrast | Word repetition vs rest |
Analysis class | Longitudinal between two groups with aphasia |
Group(s) | (Aphasia with good recovery (n = 3) T2 vs T1) vs (aphasia with poor recovery (n = 3) T2 vs T1) |
Covariate | — |
Is the second level contrast valid in terms of the group(s), time point(s), and measures involved? | Somewhat (TT not optimal measure of overall language function) |
Is accuracy matched across the second level contrast? | Unknown, not reported |
Is reaction time matched across the second level contrast? | Unknown, not reported |
Behavioral data notes | — |
Type of analysis | Regions of interest (ROI) |
ROI type | Anatomical |
How many ROIs are there? | 2 |
What are the ROI(s)? | (1) L superior temporal cortex; (2) R superior temporal cortex |
How are the ROI(s) defined? | Individual anatomical images; activation quantified in terms of extent exceeding 10% signal change, and mean % increase over the activation |
Correction for multiple comparisons | No direct comparison |
Statistical details | Qualitative generalization across individuals on pp. 214, 216 |
Findings | ↑ L posterior STG/STS/MTG ↑ L Heschl's gyrus |
Findings notes | — |