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The British object and action naming test for intraoperative mapping (BOATIM): A standardised and clinically tested framework for awake brain surgery

Mumtaz, Hajira; Piasecki, Anna E.; Kirjavainen, Minna; Newson, Margaret; Farrow, Madeleine; Cree, Molly; Barua, Neil U.

The British object and action naming test for intraoperative mapping (BOATIM): A standardised and clinically tested framework for awake brain surgery Thumbnail


Authors

Hajira Mumtaz

Anna Piasecki Anna.Piasecki@uwe.ac.uk
Director of Research and Enterprise

Margaret Newson

Madeleine Farrow

Molly Cree

Neil U. Barua



Abstract

Picture-naming tasks are widely used for identifying speech-eloquent regions during awake craniotomy. However, language-specific and culturally relevant task stimuli remain scarce. Current practices mostly rely on translated stimuli that do not reflect the everyday language use of the target speakers and might be susceptible to misinterpretations due to linguistic and cultural differences. Additionally, non-standardised homemade tasks are used. Here, we, for the first time, present the development, standardisation, and clinical application of two tests designed specifically for functional mapping in British English.
115 object and 86 action stimuli were developed using the British National Corpus (BNC) and controlled for confounding psycholinguistic variables using normative data from native speakers. Optimization of the items for intraoperative use was done by first standardising the tests in healthy volunteers followed by their application during the electrical stimulation of language-eloquent regions in brain tumour patients. In the standardised data, the influence of word- and subject-related factors on performance, and the test-retest reliability was explored.
The final items achieved above 80% naming agreement. Object naming proved easier compared to action naming, with accuracy positively influenced by word frequency and negatively affected by the age-of-acquisition variable in both tasks. No subject-related effects were found. Excellent test-retest reliability confirmed the consistency of the tests in measuring language abilities. Positive maps obtained during intraoperative functional mapping demonstrated the sensitivity of the tests in detecting speech-eloquent regions.
The tests provide a reliable and robust tool containing stimuli that are linguistically and culturally appropriate to British-English speakers.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Apr 5, 2025
Online Publication Date Apr 15, 2025
Publication Date Apr 15, 2025
Deposit Date Apr 6, 2025
Publicly Available Date Apr 15, 2025
Print ISSN 0001-6268
Electronic ISSN 0942-0940
Publisher Springer (part of Springer Nature)
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 167
Article Number 107
DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/s00701-025-06521-8
Keywords Awake craniotomy, language mapping, intraoperative, preoperative, postoperative, picture naming
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/13971190

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