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Featured researches published by S. Snider.


Neuropsychology (journal) | 2017

Leveraging the test effect to improve maintenance of the gains achieved through cognitive rehabilitation.

Rhonda B. Friedman; Kelli Sullivan; S. Snider; George Luta; Kevin T. Jones

Objective: An important aspect of the rehabilitation of cognitive and linguistic function subsequent to brain injury is the maintenance of learning beyond the time of initial treatment. Such maintenance is often not satisfactorily achieved. Additional practice, or overtraining, may play a key role in long-term maintenance. In particular, the literature on learning in cognitively intact persons has suggested that it is testing, and not studying, that contributes to maintenance of learning. The present study investigates the hypothesis that continuing to test relearned words in persons with anomia will lead to significantly greater maintenance compared with continuing to study relearned words. Method: The current study combines overtraining with the variable of test versus study in examining the effects of overtesting and overstudying on maintenance of word finding in 3 persons with aphasia. First, treatment successfully reestablished the connections between known items and their names. Once the connections were reestablished (i.e., items could be named successfully), each item was placed into 1 of 4 overtraining conditions: test and study, only test, only study, or no longer test or study. Maintenance was probed at 1 month and 4 months following the end of overtraining. Results: The results are consistent with an advantage of testing compared with studying. All 3 participants showed significantly greater maintenance for words that were overtested than for words that were overstudied. This testing benefit persisted at 1 month and 4 months after completion of the treatment. In fact, there was no clear evidence for any benefit of overstudying. Conclusions: The present study demonstrates that overtesting, but not overstudying, leads to lasting maintenance of language rehabilitation gains in patients with anomia. The implications for the design of other treatment protocols are immense.


Cognitive Neuropsychology | 2016

Objective support for subjective reports of successful inner speech in two people with aphasia

William Hayward; S. Snider; George Luta; Rhonda B. Friedman; Peter E. Turkeltaub

ABSTRACT People with aphasia frequently report being able to say a word correctly in their heads, even if they are unable to say that word aloud. It is difficult to know what is meant by these reports of “successful inner speech”. We probe the experience of successful inner speech in two people with aphasia. We show that these reports are associated with correct overt speech and phonologically related nonword errors, that they relate to word characteristics associated with ease of lexical access but not ease of production, and that they predict whether or not individual words are relearned during anomia treatment. These findings suggest that reports of successful inner speech are meaningful and may be useful to study self-monitoring in aphasia, to better understand anomia, and to predict treatment outcomes. Ultimately, the study of inner speech in people with aphasia could provide critical insights that inform our understanding of normal language.


Brain and Language | 2017

Subjective experience of inner speech in aphasia: Preliminary behavioral relationships and neural correlates.

Mackenzie Fama; William Hayward; S. Snider; Rhonda B. Friedman; Peter E. Turkeltaub


Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences | 2013

Remediation and Prophylaxis of Anomia in Primary Progressive Aphasia

A. Meyer; H. Getz; S. Snider; K. Sullivan; S. Long; R. Turner; Rhonda B. Friedman


Neurology | 2015

Self-report of Correct Inner Speech Predicts Naming Success, Brain Activity and Treatment Outcomes in People with Aphasia (P1.210)

William Hayward; Mackenzie Fama; Kelli Sullivan; S. Snider; Elizabeth H. Lacey; Rhonda B. Friedman; Peter E. Turkeltaub


Neurology | 2015

I know it but I can't say it: Using self-report to understand the experience of inner speech in aphasia (P1.211)

Mackenzie Fama; S. Snider; William Hayward; Rhonda B. Friedman; Peter E. Turkeltaub


Neurology | 2014

The Feeling That 'I Can Say It in My Head' Predicts Word-by-Word Success in Subsequent Aphasia Treatment. (P2.118)

William Hayward; Kelli Sullivan; S. Snider; Elizabeth H. Lacey; Rhonda B. Friedman; Peter E. Turkeltaub


Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences | 2013

The Effects of Testing on Maintenance of Learning in Anomia Rehabilitation

K. Sullivan; S. Snider; Rhonda B. Friedman


Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences | 2013

Successful Remote Delivery of a Treatment for Phonologic Alexia via Telerehab

H. Getz; S. Snider; D. Brennan; Rhonda B. Friedman


Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences | 2013

Using Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS) to Treat Pure Alexia: A Case Study☆

E. Lacey; S. Snider; W. Hayward; Rhonda B. Friedman; Peter E. Turkeltaub

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Rhonda B. Friedman

Georgetown University Medical Center

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Peter E. Turkeltaub

MedStar National Rehabilitation Hospital

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Aimee Syms Carney

Georgetown University Medical Center

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H. Getz

Georgetown University

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Susan Nitzberg Lott

Georgetown University Medical Center

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