Language deficits are a major characteristic of neurobehavioral
dysfunction in pediatric HIV disease. An object decision
task, which assessed reaction time facilitation following
a semantic or identical prime in comparison to an unrelated
prime, was used to investigate whether semantic processing
abnormalities could be responsible, in part, for these
deficits. Thirty children with vertically acquired HIV
infection (M age 9.0 years; range 6–13)
participated. Either a picture of the same object (repetition
prime), a semantically related object (semantic prime),
a semantically unrelated object, or a nonsense object preceded
a target picture, which in 50% of the cases was a real
object. Brain scans of children were rated and used together
with neurobehavioral functioning to classify children as
having HIV-related CNS abnormalities (n = 13)
or not (n = 17). Increased semantic priming but
not repetition priming was associated with a greater degree
of cortical atrophy. Furthermore, CNS compromised children
had significantly faster reaction times following a semantic
prime compared to an unrelated prime than non-compromised
patients. This facilitation following semantic priming
for the CNS compromised patients (13.3%) almost equaled
the facilitation following repetition priming (15.3%) while
for the non-compromised patients facilitation following
semantic priming (7.9%) was clearly smaller than following
repetition priming (14.6%). These data suggest that HIV
infection in children may result in a reduced neural network
leading to impoverished semantic representations characterized
by poor differentiation between closely related objects.
(JINS, 2001, 7, 491–501.)