Literature DB >> 18641791

Functional category production in English agrammatism.

Jiyeon Lee1, Lisa H Milman, Cynthia K Thompson.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Individuals with agrammatism show selective deficits in functional categories. The Tree Pruning Hypothesis (TPH; Friedmann & Grodzinsky, 1997) suggests that this results from inability to project certain nodes in the syntactic tree. On this account, higher nodes in the tree are more vulnerable than lower ones. Other theories, however, suggest that functional category impairments can be explained in the context of a morphological deficit (e.g., Arabatzi & Edwards, 2002; Penke, 2003; Thompson, Fix, Gitelman, 2002). AIMS: This study examined production of complementizers, tense, and agreement morphology in four English-speaking agrammatic participants to test the hierarchical nature of functional category deficits. The consistency of verb inflection errors was also tested under conditions examining a minimal set versus a full array of English inflected forms. MATERIALS #ENTITYSTARTX00026; PROCEDURES: In experiment 1, participants were asked to produce sentences by using a complementizer (i.e. whether, that, and if), a tense (-ed) or agreement marker (-s), in structured sentence elicitation tasks. In experiment 2, the participants' production of both finite and nonfinite verb inflection forms was examined. OUTCOME #ENTITYSTARTX00026;
RESULTS: All participants produced complex sentences successfully using a complementizer, indicating intact projection to the Complementizer Phrase (CP). As for tense and agreement (structures within the Inflection Phrase (IP)), the agrammatic speakers were impaired in both categories and they showed higher scores in nonfinite vs. finite verb conditions. Further, their errors were dominated by substitutions, rather than omissions, with various non-target morphemes.
CONCLUSIONS: Our agrammatic participants' deficits are morphological, rather than syntactic. The participants were able to project to the upper most structure, CP. They showed the ability to project verb inflection and to implement inflectional rules in their grammar. However, instantiation of grammatical markers sometimes failed to operate, resulting in incorrect inflectional forms. These findings suggest that within the domain of functional categories, IP- and CP-level deficits may result from disruption of differing underlying mechanisms and, therefore, they may require separate treatment strategies.

Entities:  

Year:  2008        PMID: 18641791      PMCID: PMC2474807          DOI: 10.1080/02687030701865670

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Aphasiology        ISSN: 0268-7038            Impact factor:   2.773


  15 in total

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4.  A cross-linguistic study of grammatical morphology in Spanish- and English-speaking agrammatic patients.

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5.  Selective impairment of morphosyntactic production in a neurological patient.

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8.  Tense and syntactic processes in agrammatic speech.

Authors:  Marina Arabatzi; Susan Edwards
Journal:  Brain Lang       Date:  2002-03       Impact factor: 2.381

9.  Tense and agreement in agrammatic production: pruning the syntactic tree.

Authors:  N Friedmann; Y Grodzinsky
Journal:  Brain Lang       Date:  1997-02-15       Impact factor: 2.381

10.  Judgment of functional morphology in agrammatic aphasia.

Authors:  Michael Walsh Dickey; Lisa H Milman; Cynthia K Thompson
Journal:  J Neurolinguistics       Date:  2008-01       Impact factor: 1.710

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3.  Phonological facilitation effects on naming latencies and viewing times during noun and verb naming in agrammatic and anomic aphasia.

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5.  The neural correlates of agrammatism: Evidence from aphasic and healthy speakers performing an overt picture description task.

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