Title of article :
Developing the Persian version of the homophone meaning generation test
Author/Authors :
Ebrahimipour, Mona Department of Speech Therapy - School of Rehabilitation - Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran , Motamed, Mohammad Reza Department of Neurology - Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran , Ashayeri, Hassan Department of Basic Sciences in Rehabilitation - School of Rehabilitation - Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran , Modarresi, Yahya Department of Linguistics - Human Sciences and Cultural Education Institute, Tehran, Iran , Kamali, Mohammad Department of Basic Sciences in Rehabilitation - Iran University of Medical Sciences - School of Rehabilitation Sciences, Tehran, Iran
Abstract :
Background: Finding the right word is a necessity in communication, and its evaluation has always
been a challenging clinical issue, suggesting the need for valid and reliable measurements. The
Homophone Meaning Generation Test (HMGT) can measure the ability to switch between verbal
concepts, which is required in word retrieval. The purpose of this study was to adapt and validate the
Persian version of the HMGT.
Methods: The first phase involved the adaptation of the HMGT to the Persian language. The second
phase concerned the psychometric testing. The word-finding performance was assessed in 90
Persian-speaking healthy individuals (20-50 year old; 45 males and 45 females) through three naming
tasks: Semantic Fluency, Phonemic Fluency, and Homophone Meaning Generation Test. The
participants had no history of neurological or psychiatric diseases, alcohol abuse, severe depression,
or history of speech, language, or learning problems.
Results: The internal consistency coefficient was larger than 0.8 for all the items with a total
Cronbach’s alpha of 0.80. Interrater and intrarater reliability were also excellent. The validity of all
items was above 0.77, and the content validity index (0.99) was appropriate. The Persian HMGT had
strong convergent validity with semantic and phonemic switching and adequate divergent validity
with semantic and phonemic clustering.
Conclusion: The Persian version of the Homophone Meaning Generation Test is an appropriate,
valid, and reliable test to evaluate the ability to switch between verbal concepts in the assessment of
word-finding performance.
Keywords :
Verbal Fluency , Neuropsychological Assessment , Naming , Language , Homophone Meaning Generation Test
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics