Abstract
BACKGROUND: Previous research has suggested that short-term and working memory resources play a critical role in sentence comprehension, especially when comprehension mechanisms cannot rely on semantics alone. However, few studies have examined this association in participants in acute stroke, before the opportunity for therapy and reorganization of cognitive functions. AIMS: The present study examined the hypothesis that severity of short-term memory deficit due to acute stroke predicts the severity of impairment in the comprehension of syntactically complex sentences. Furthermore, we examined the association between damage to the short-term and working memory network and impaired sentence comprehension, as an association would be predicted by the previous hypothesis. METHODS & PROCEDURES: 47 participants with acute stroke and 14 participants with a transient ischemic attack (TIA; the control group) were included in the present study. Participants received a language battery and clinical or research scans within 48 hours of hospital admittance. The present study focused on the behavioral data from the short-term memory and working memory span tasks and a sentence-picture matching comprehension task included in this battery. Using regression analyses, we examined whether short-term and working memory measures explained significant variance in sentence comprehension performance. OUTCOMES & RESULTS: Consistent with prior research, short-term memory explained significant variance in sentence comprehension performance in acute stroke; in contrast, working memory accounted for little variance beyond that which was already explained by short-term memory. Furthermore, ischemia that included the short-term/working memory network was sufficient to cause sentence comprehension impairments for syntactically complex sentences. CONCLUSIONS: The present study suggests that short-term memory resources are an important source of sentence comprehension impairments.