Literature DB >> 29720780

Corpus-Based Transitivity Biases in Individuals with Aphasia.

Jennifer DiLallo1, Heidi Mettler1, Gayle DeDe2.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: This study investigated whether individuals with aphasia (IWA) retain verb biases in expressive language. Verb biases refer to the likelihood that a given verb will occur in different sentence structures. We focused on the likelihood of verbs occurring in transitive and intransitive structures. AIMS: The main goal of this study was to determine whether IWA and controls show similar verb biases or whether IWA show a preference for transitive or intransitive structures that supersedes individual verb biases. We also investigated whether IWA show a preference for intransitively or transitively biased verbs, whether verb biases differ as a function of aphasia type, and how verb bias affects errors in IWA's speech production.
METHODS: The current study analyzed 236 transcribed interviews of IWA from AphasiaBank. All uses of 54 verbs were coded based on the sentence structure and the presence of errors. We report data from 11 transitively biased and 11 intransitively biased verbs. OUTCOMES AND
RESULTS: IWA's transitivity biases were indistinguishable from controls' biases. In addition, IWA produced more intransitively biased verbs than transitively biased verbs overall. In ungrammatical productions, IWA's error rates were higher in sentence structures that conflicted with verb bias and highest when an intransitively biased verb was attempted in a transitive structure. MAIN
CONCLUSIONS: These findings indicate that IWA are sensitive to verb bias and verb complexity within expressive language. The effects are consistent with previous literature concerning IWA's sensitivity to verb bias in receptive language tasks and to verb complexity in verb retrieval tasks.

Entities:  

Keywords:  AphasiaBank; aphasia; expressive language; transitivity; verb bias

Year:  2017        PMID: 29720780      PMCID: PMC5926238          DOI: 10.1080/02687038.2016.1271105

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


  16 in total

1.  Patterns of comprehension and production of nouns and verbs in agrammatism: implications for lexical organization.

Authors:  M Kim; C K Thompson
Journal:  Brain Lang       Date:  2000-08       Impact factor: 2.381

2.  Verb subcategorization frequencies: American English corpus data, methodological studies, and cross-corpus comparisons.

Authors:  Susanne Gahl; Dan Jurafsky; Douglas Roland
Journal:  Behav Res Methods Instrum Comput       Date:  2004-08

3.  Agrammatic aphasic production and comprehension of unaccusative verbs in sentence contexts.

Authors:  Miseon Lee; Cynthia K Thompson
Journal:  J Neurolinguistics       Date:  2004-04       Impact factor: 1.710

4.  Characterising thematic role assignment in aphasic sentence production: procedures for elicited and spontaneous output.

Authors:  A Whitworth
Journal:  Eur J Disord Commun       Date:  1995

5.  On the basis for the agrammatic's difficulty in producing main verbs.

Authors:  G Miceli; M C Silveri; G Villa; A Caramazza
Journal:  Cortex       Date:  1984-06       Impact factor: 4.027

6.  Frequency of Basic English Grammatical Structures: A Corpus Analysis.

Authors:  Douglas Roland; Frederic Dick; Jeffrey L Elman
Journal:  J Mem Lang       Date:  2007-10-01       Impact factor: 3.059

7.  Epidemiology of aphasia attributable to first ischemic stroke: incidence, severity, fluency, etiology, and thrombolysis.

Authors:  Stefan T Engelter; Michal Gostynski; Susanna Papa; Maya Frei; Claudia Born; Vladeta Ajdacic-Gross; Felix Gutzwiller; Phillipe A Lyrer
Journal:  Stroke       Date:  2006-05-11       Impact factor: 7.914

8.  Verb retrieval in aphasia. 2. Relationship to sentence processing.

Authors:  R S Berndt; A N Haendiges; C C Mitchum; J Sandson
Journal:  Brain Lang       Date:  1997-01       Impact factor: 2.381

9.  AphasiaBank: Methods for Studying Discourse.

Authors:  Brian Macwhinney; Davida Fromm; Margaret Forbes; Audrey Holland
Journal:  Aphasiology       Date:  2011-09-22       Impact factor: 2.773

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

Authors:  Jiyeon Lee; Cynthia K Thompson
Journal:  Aphasiology       Date:  2015       Impact factor: 2.773

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