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Dive into the research topics where Elisabeth Meffert is active.

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Featured researches published by Elisabeth Meffert.


NeuroImage | 2011

Word frequency effects in the left IFG in dyslexic and normally reading children during picture naming and reading

Marion Grande; Elisabeth Meffert; Walter Huber; Katrin Amunts; Stefan Heim

Word frequency effects have been reported in numerous neuroimaging studies with typically reading adults, emphasising the role of the left inferior frontal gyrus (LIFG). Within LIFG, different cytoarchitectonic modules (areas 44 and 45) have been related to phonological vs. lexico-semantic processing, respectively. This fMRI study investigated the differential impact of word frequency on LIFG activation in reading and picture naming in primary school children with and without developmental dyslexia. All children showed the typical LIFG frequency effect in both tasks. The effect was comparable in a fronto-orbital region anterior-inferior adjacent to area 45. During reading but not picture naming, a second effect was observed in area 44. Here, the fMRI effect for lexical frequency was stronger for the dyslexic than the normal readers. These findings demonstrate the neural underpinnings of a selective deficit in dyslexic children in the graphemic input lexicon, whereas abstract lexical representations appear to be processed equally well in dyslexic and normally reading children. To conclude, the present fMRI study demonstrated differential impact of word frequency on LIFG activation in primary school children during reading but not picture naming. Apart from extending previous knowledge from studies with adults to childhood, the study sheds further light on a potential neural mechanism for deficient grapheme-to-phoneme conversion in dyslexic children.


NeuroImage | 2012

From a concept to a word in a syntactically complete sentence: An fMRI study on spontaneous language production in an overt picture description task

Marion Grande; Elisabeth Meffert; Eva Schoenberger; Stefanie Jung; Tobias Frauenrath; Walter Huber; Katja Hussmann; Mareike Moormann; Stefan Heim

Spontaneous language has rarely been subjected to neuroimaging studies. This study therefore introduces a newly developed method for the analysis of linguistic phenomena observed in continuous language production during fMRI. Most neuroimaging studies investigating language have so far focussed on single word or - to a smaller extent - sentence processing, mostly due to methodological considerations. Natural language production, however, is far more than the mere combination of words to larger units. Therefore, the present study aimed at relating brain activation to linguistic phenomena like word-finding difficulties or syntactic completeness in a continuous language fMRI paradigm. A picture description task with special constraints was used to provoke hesitation phenomena and speech errors. The transcribed speech sample was segmented into events of one second and each event was assigned to one category of a complex schema especially developed for this purpose. The main results were: conceptual planning engages bilateral activation of the precuneus. Successful lexical retrieval is accompanied - particularly in comparison to unsolved word-finding difficulties - by the left middle and superior temporal gyrus. Syntactic completeness is reflected in activation of the left inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) (area 44). In sum, the method has proven to be useful for investigating the neural correlates of lexical and syntactic phenomena in an overt picture description task. This opens up new prospects for the analysis of spontaneous language production during fMRI.


Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics | 2012

Computer-assisted analysis of spontaneous speech: quantification of basic parameters in aphasic and unimpaired language

Katja Hussmann; Marion Grande; Elisabeth Meffert; Swetlana Christoph; Martina Piefke; Klaus Willmes; Walter Huber

Although generally accepted as an important part of aphasia assessment, detailed analysis of spontaneous speech is rarely carried out in clinical practice mostly due to time limitations. The Aachener Sprachanalyse (ASPA; Aachen Speech Analysis) is a computer-assisted method for the quantitative analysis of German spontaneous speech that allows for a detailed assessment by means of linguistic basic parameters in an acceptable amount of time. It has previously been proven sensitive for monitoring changes over time. In this study, we present data of 52 aphasic participants whose spontaneous speech was analyzed retrospectively before and after an intensive therapy program. The measured changes are evaluated with reference to normative data of 60 non-brain-damaged speakers. Results confirm good sensitivity to document changes over time. Clinical relevance of changes is assessed with reference to critical score ranges derived from the normative data. Findings provide further evidence of the clinical applicability and usefulness of ASPA.


Journal of Psycholinguistic Research | 2011

Taboo: a novel paradigm to elicit aphasia-like trouble-indicating behaviour in normally speaking individuals.

Elisabeth Meffert; Eva Tillmanns; Stefan Heim; Stefanie Jung; Walter Huber; Marion Grande

Two important research lines in neuro- and psycholinguistics are studying natural or experimentally induced slips of the tongue and investigating the symptom patterns of aphasic individuals. Only few studies have focused on explaining aphasic symptoms by provoking aphasic symptoms in healthy speakers. While all experimental techniques have so far dealt with the single word or the sentence level, the current study intended to provoke aphasia-like trouble-indicating behaviour (i.e. prepairs and repairs) in the spontaneous language production of unimpaired speakers. In their descriptions of complex pictures, the participants were requested to avoid particular words terming central elements of the pictures. The results show that the error pattern provoked by the novel “taboo” paradigm resembled substantially the pattern of aphasic individuals. Consequently, the paradigm is applicable for further studies, e.g. for bringing forward the understanding of spontaneous language production or for comparing the neurofunctional basis of errors in healthy and aphasic speakers.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2014

The neural correlates of agrammatism: Evidence from aphasic and healthy speakers performing an overt picture description task

Eva Schoenberger; Stefan Heim; Elisabeth Meffert; Peter Pieperhoff; Patricia da Costa Avelar; Walter Huber; Ferdinand Binkofski; Marion Grande

Functional brain imaging studies have improved our knowledge of the neural localization of language functions and the functional reorganization after a lesion. However, the neural correlates of agrammatic symptoms in aphasia remain largely unknown. The present fMRI study examined the neural correlates of morpho-syntactic encoding and agrammatic errors in continuous language production by combining three approaches. First, the neural mechanisms underlying natural morpho-syntactic processing in a picture description task were analyzed in 15 healthy speakers. Second, agrammatic-like speech behavior was induced in the same group of healthy speakers to study the underlying functional processes by limiting the utterance length. In a third approach, five agrammatic participants performed the picture description task to gain insights in the neural correlates of agrammatism and the functional reorganization of language processing after stroke. In all approaches, utterances were analyzed for syntactic completeness, complexity, and morphology. Event-related data analysis was conducted by defining every clause-like unit (CLU) as an event with its onset-time and duration. Agrammatic and correct CLUs were contrasted. Due to the small sample size as well as heterogeneous lesion sizes and sites with lesion foci in the insula lobe, inferior frontal, superior temporal and inferior parietal areas the activation patterns in the agrammatic speakers were analyzed on a single subject level. In the group of healthy speakers, posterior temporal and inferior parietal areas were associated with greater morpho-syntactic demands in complete and complex CLUs. The intentional manipulation of morpho-syntactic structures and the omission of function words were associated with additional inferior frontal activation. Overall, the results revealed that the investigation of the neural correlates of agrammatic language production can be reasonably conducted with an overt language production paradigm.


Dyslexia | 2010

Interaction of phonological awareness and 'magnocellular' processing during normal and dyslexic reading: behavioural and fMRI investigations.

Stefan Heim; Marion Grande; Julia Pape-Neumann; Muna van Ermingen; Elisabeth Meffert; Anna Grabowska; Walter Huber; Katrin Amunts


NeuroImage | 2010

Cognitive levels of performance account for hemispheric lateralisation effects in dyslexic and normally reading children

Stefan Heim; Marion Grande; Elisabeth Meffert; Simon B. Eickhoff; Helen Schreiber; Juraj Kukolja; Nadim Joni Shah; Walter Huber; Katrin Amunts


Sprache-stimme-gehor | 2011

Neuronale Korrelate lexikalischen Suchverhaltens in der aphasischen Spontansprache: Ein Einzelfall

E. Tillmanns; Elisabeth Meffert; Stefan Heim; T. Frauenrath; Walter Huber; Katrin Amunts; Marion Grande


Sprache-stimme-gehor | 2011

Neuronale Korrelate lexikalischen Suchverhaltens in der aphasischen Spontansprache: Ein Einzelfall Neural correlates of lexical retrieval in aphasic spontaneous language: a single-case study)

E. Tillmanns; Stefan Heim; Elisabeth Meffert; Marion Grande; Katrin Amunts; T. Frauenrath; Walter Huber


Sprache-stimme-gehor | 2010

Basisparameter ungestörter Spontansprache: Voraussetzung für die Aphasiediagnostik*

Elisabeth Meffert; Marion Grande; K. Hußmann; Swetlana Christoph; Klaus Willmes; Martina Piefke; Walter Huber

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Stefan Heim

RWTH Aachen University

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Katrin Amunts

University of Düsseldorf

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Martina Piefke

Witten/Herdecke University

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