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Compounds in different aphasia categories: A study on picture naming
24
Citations
14
References
2011
Year
NeurolinguisticsAcquired AphasiaPsycholinguisticsAphasia CategoriesMorphology (Linguistics)Language ProductionCognitive LinguisticsInternal SpeechAphasiaLanguage StudiesAnomic AphasiaDifferent Aphasia CategoriesCognitive ScienceAphasia Neuro-rehabilitationSpeech ProductionArtsMorphologyBilingual PhonologyPhonology MorphologyLanguage ScienceMotor SpeechNeuroscienceCommunicative DisordersSpeech PerceptionLinguisticsNeurogenic Communication Disorders
Abstract This study investigated the production of compounds in Italian-speaking patients affected by different aphasia categories (i.e., Broca's, Wernicke's, and anomic aphasia) in a confrontation naming task. Questions of theoretical interest concerning the processing of compounds within the framework of the “lemma theory” as well as the role of morphological productivity in compound processing are addressed. Results indicate that all persons with aphasia retain knowledge of the morphological status of words, even when they fail to retrieve the corresponding phonological form (the “compound effect”). A difference was found among aphasia categories in the type of errors produced (omission vs. substitution) and in the position (first or second) of these errors within the compound words. In Broca's aphasia, the first component is omitted more frequently than the second one, but only in verb–noun compounds. Anomic and Wernicke's aphasia, unlike in Broca's aphasia, seem to retain sensitivity to morphological productivity. Keywords: Compound wordsAphasiaPosition effectLexical accessProductivity
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