Aphasia types were classified based on the Western Aphasia Battery-Revised (WAB-R) (Kertesz, 2007 ). Among the 49 participants included in the study sample, 15 were diagnosed with anomic aphasia, and 34 were diagnosed with Broca’s aphasia. Figure 1 shows a lesion overlap map of the participants in the two groups. Demographic statistics of the two groups are summarized in Table 1. The mean age in the anomic group was 62.73 y.o. (s.d. = 11.97; range = 41) and the mean age in the Broca’s group is 59.82 y.o. (s.d. = 10.35; range = 39). Respectively 60% and 68% of the participants in the anomic and Broca’s group were male. There was no significant difference in age and gender between the anomic and Broca’s group (age: p-value = 0.42 by two-sample t-test; gender: p = 0.74 by χ2-test). The mean WAB-R score for the anomic group was 85.74 (s.d. = 6.38; range = 22.1) and 46.44 (s.d. = 16.93; range = 59.1) for the Broca’s group. The WAB-R score for the anomic group is significantly higher than the Broca’s group (p-value < 0.01 by two-sample t-test), since the participants with Broca’s aphasia tend to have a lower score in the section of fluency and repetition than the participants with anomic aphasia.