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Retention of Implicit Sequence Learning in Persons Who Stutter and Persons With Parkinson's Disease
Authors:Sarah Smits-Bandstra  Vincent Gracco
Affiliation:1. Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, St. Cloud State University, Minnesotasmsmitsbandstra@stcloudstate.edu;3. School of Communication Sciences and Disorders, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada;4. Centre for Research on Brain, Language, and Music, Montreal, Quebec, Canada;5. Haskins Laboratories, New Haven, Connecticut
Abstract:ABSTRACT. The authors investigated the retention of implicit sequence learning in 14 persons with Parkinson's disease (PPD), 14 persons who stutter (PWS), and 14 control participants. Participants completed a nonsense syllable serial reaction time task in a 120-min session. Participants named aloud 4 syllables in response to 4 visual stimuli. The syllables formed a repeating 8-item sequence not made known to participants. After 1 week, participants completed a 60-min retention session that included an explicit learning questionnaire and a sequence generation task. PPD showed retention of general learning equivalent to controls but PWS's reaction times were significantly slower on early trials of the retention test relative to other groups. Controls showed implicit learning during the initial session that was retained on the retention test. In contrast, PPD and PWS did not demonstrate significant implicit learning until the retention test suggesting intact, but delayed, learning and retention of implicit sequencing skills. All groups demonstrated similar limited explicit sequence knowledge. Performance differences between PWS and PPD relative to controls during the initial session and on early retention trials indicated possible dysfunction of the cortico-striato-thalamo-cortical loop. The etiological implications for stuttering, and clinical implications for both populations, of this dysfunction are discussed.
Keywords:implicit sequence learning  Parkinson's disease  retention  speech  stuttering
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