Sensitivity to inflectional morphology in agrammatism: Investigation of a highly inflected language

We present the results of a study with six Serbo-Croatian-speaking agrammatic patients on a test of inflectional morphology in which subjects judged whether spoken sentences were grammatical or ungrammatical. Sensitivity to two kinds of syntactic features was investigated in these aphasic patients:...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain and language 1988, Vol.33 (1), p.1-15
Hauptverfasser: Lukatela, K., Crain, S., Shankweiler, D.
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Shankweiler, D.
description We present the results of a study with six Serbo-Croatian-speaking agrammatic patients on a test of inflectional morphology in which subjects judged whether spoken sentences were grammatical or ungrammatical. Sensitivity to two kinds of syntactic features was investigated in these aphasic patients: (1) subcategorization rules for transitive verbs (which must be followed by a noun in the accusative case; intransitive verbs can be followed by nouns in other noun cases); (2) sensitivity to the inflectional morphology marking noun case. The test items consisted of three-word sentences (noun-verb-noun) in which verb transitivity and appropriateness of the case inflection of the following noun were manipulated. Results of the grammaticality judgment task show that both syntactic properties are preserved in these patients.
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subjects Adult
Aphasia - psychology
Aphasia, Broca - psychology
Biological and medical sciences
Brain Damage, Chronic - psychology
Female
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Humans
Language
Male
Middle Aged
Phonetics
Production and perception of spoken language
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychophysiology
Semantics
Speech Perception
Speech Production Measurement
title Sensitivity to inflectional morphology in agrammatism: Investigation of a highly inflected language
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