| Literature DB >> 11699116 |
F Dick1, E Bates, B Wulfeck, J A Utman, N Dronkers, M A Gernsbacher.
Abstract
Selective deficits in aphasic patients' grammatical production and comprehension are often cited as evidence that syntactic processing is modular and localizable in discrete areas of the brain (e.g., Y. Grodzinsky, 2000). The authors review a large body of experimental evidence suggesting that morpho-syntactic deficits can be observed in a number of aphasic and neurologically intact populations. They present new data showing that receptive agrammatism is found not only over a range of aphasic groups, but is also observed in neurologically intact individuals processing under stressful conditions. The authors suggest that these data are most compatible with a domain-general account of language, one that emphasizes the interaction of linguistic distributions with the properties of an associative processor working under normal or suboptimal conditions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2001 PMID: 11699116 PMCID: PMC4301444 DOI: 10.1037/0033-295x.108.4.759
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Rev ISSN: 0033-295X Impact factor: 8.934