@article{oai:nsg.repo.nii.ac.jp:00004444, author = {Oishi, Yuka and Sugai, Tsutomu}, issue = {1}, journal = {Niigata journal of health and welfare, 1346-8782}, month = {}, note = {application/pdf, 論文(Article), This article reports a case of 70-year-old right-handed woman who made various naming errors because of anomic aphasia that developed after hemorrhage in the left temporal lobe. She was fluent in spontaneous speech with no signs of dysarthria, and despite occasional word-finding difficulties, she had almost no paraphasic errors. Auditory comprehension was preserved for short sentences. Comprehensive examination during the chronic phase revealed, in addition to semantic errors, many phonological errors such as formal paraphasia and phonological fragments which are normally absent in classical anomic aphasia. However, word-level repetition was excellent with no phonological paraphasia. A detailed cognitive neuropsychological investigation of the patient’s ability to name objects to confrontation was carried out in an attempt to determine where her cognitive deficits might lie. Based on analysis of these oral naming errors, we suspected that she could not select appropriate lexical items from the lexicon and, moreover, that she had difficulty retrieving complete phonological forms of the items.}, pages = {71--80}, title = {A case of anomic aphasia with various paraphasic errors : Focusing on phonological anomia}, volume = {15}, year = {2015} }