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      First-pass versus second-pass parsing processes in a Wernicke's and a Broca's aphasic: electrophysiological evidence for a double dissociation.

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      Brain and language

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          Abstract

          The present paper is a first attempt to integrate the classical brain lesion behavioral impairment approach of functional neuroanatomy and the electrophysiological brain mapping approach in the domain of syntactic processing. In a group of normal age-matched controls we identified three electrophysiological components previously observed in correlation with language comprehension processes: an early left anterior negativity normally seen in correlation with syntactic first-pass parsing processes (ELAN), a centroparietal negativity seen in correlation with processes of lexical-semantic integration (N400), and a late centroparietal positivity observed in correlation with secondary syntactic processes of reanalysis and repair (P600). The early left anterior negativity was absent in a patient with an extended lesion in the anterior part of the left hemisphere sparing the temporal lobe, although the late centroparietal positivity and the centroparietal N400 were present. In a patient with a left temporal-parietal lesion the early left anterior negativity was found to be present, whereas the N400 component was absent. These findings suggest that first-pass parsing and secondary processes are subserved by distinct brain systems.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Brain Lang
          Brain and language
          0093-934X
          0093-934X
          May 1998
          : 62
          : 3
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Max-Planck-Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, Leipzig, Germany. angelafr@cns.mpg.de
          Article
          S0093-934X(97)91906-4
          10.1006/brln.1997.1906
          9593613
          07b3c49d-7b20-4906-8a39-26a55098b445
          Copyright 1998 Academic Press.
          History

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