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      Production of Verb Tense in Agrammatic Aphasia: A Meta-Analysis and Further Data

      review-article
      1 , * , 2
      Behavioural Neurology
      Hindawi Publishing Corporation

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          Abstract

          In a majority of languages, the time of an event is expressed by marking tense on the verb. There is substantial evidence that the production of verb tense in sentences is more severely impaired than other functional categories in persons with agrammatic aphasia. The underlying source of this verb tense impairment is less clear, particularly in terms of the relative contribution of conceptual-semantic and processing demands. This study aimed to provide a more precise characterization of verb tense impairment by examining if there is dissociation within tenses (due to conceptual-semantic differences) and an effect of experimental task (mediated by processing limitations). Two sources of data were used: a meta-analysis of published research (which yielded 143 datasets) and new data from 16 persons with agrammatic aphasia. Tensed verbs were significantly more impaired than neutral (nonfinite) verbs, but there were no consistent differences between past, present, and future tenses. Overall, tense accuracy was mediated by task, such that picture description task was the most challenging, relative to sentence completion, sentence production priming, and grammaticality judgment. An interaction between task and tense revealed a past tense disadvantage for a sentence production priming task. These findings indicate that verb tense impairment is exacerbated by processing demands of the elicitation task and the conceptual-semantic differences between tenses are too subtle to show differential performance in agrammatism.

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          Most cited references85

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          Lectures on Government and Binding.

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

            This paper discusses the description of agrammatic production focusing on the verbal inflectional morphology. Agrammatism in Hebrew is investigated through an experiment with a patient who displays a highly selective impairment: agreement inflection is completely intact, but tense inflection, use of copula, and embedded structures are severely impaired. A retrospective examination of the literature shows that our findings are corroborated by others. A selective account of the agrammatic production deficiency is proposed, according to which only a subclass of the functional syntactic categories is impaired in this syndrome. The consequence of this deficit is the pruning of the syntactic phrase marker of agrammatic patients, which impairs performance from the impaired node and higher. These findings also bear upon central issues in linguistic theories, particularly that of Pollock (1989), regarding split inflection.
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              Verb Retrieval in Aphasia. 1. Characterizing Single Word Impairments

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Behav Neurol
                Behav Neurol
                BN
                Behavioural Neurology
                Hindawi Publishing Corporation
                0953-4180
                1875-8584
                2015
                20 September 2015
                : 2015
                : 983870
                Affiliations
                1University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA
                2University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA
                Author notes
                *Yasmeen Faroqi-Shah: yfshah@ 123456umd.edu

                Academic Editor: Annalena Venneri

                Article
                10.1155/2015/983870
                4592739
                5c19e4df-793a-4286-8a77-2dae7727943d
                Copyright © 2015 Y. Faroqi-Shah and L. Friedman.

                This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 31 March 2015
                : 2 June 2015
                : 12 August 2015
                Categories
                Review Article

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