Phonemic Fluency in Portuguese-speaking Subjects in Brazil: Ranking of Letters

Phonological verbal fluency studies in English most commonly employ the letters F-A-S as stimuli. We assessed the production of words with these and 14 other letters in Portuguese-speaking healthy subjects (n = 74). The letters F-A-S were ranked among the easiest to produce words in one minute, whic...

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Published inJournal of clinical and experimental neuropsychology Vol. 28; no. 7; pp. 1191 - 1200
Main Authors Senhorini, Maurien C.T., Amaro Júnior, Edson, de Mello Ayres, Adriana, de Simone, Adriana, Busatto, Geraldo F.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Colchester Taylor & Francis Group 01.10.2006
Taylor & Francis
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Summary:Phonological verbal fluency studies in English most commonly employ the letters F-A-S as stimuli. We assessed the production of words with these and 14 other letters in Portuguese-speaking healthy subjects (n = 74). The letters F-A-S were ranked among the easiest to produce words in one minute, which is consistent with the findings of studies with English-speaking subjects. There were differences in the overall ranking of letters depending on whether the total word number or the latency between words were considered. Our findings provide a databank of phonological verbal fluency performance using different stimuli in Portuguese, and demonstrate that the ranking of the letters F-A-S is comparable between the English and Portuguese languages in terms of the level of difficulty to produce words, when the task is used in its traditional format.
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ISSN:1380-3395
1744-411X
DOI:10.1080/13803390500350969