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      The impact of morphophonological patterns on verb production: evidence from acquired morphological impairment

      research-article
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      Clinical linguistics & phonetics
      Morphology, phonology, morphophonology, production, aphasia

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          Abstract

          Although much of the research on morphology and aphasia has focused specifically on the distinction between regular and irregular verb production, individuals with aphasia often present with differences in performance within these categories. While these within-category differences are relatively understudied, they have the potential to inform our understanding of the morphological processing system and treatment protocols for morphological impairment. The present study examines how morphophonological patterns in English impact past-tense production within the categories of regular and irregular verbs based on errors of an individual with acquired morphological impairment. Acquired morphological impairment was demonstrated by performance on two reading tasks. First, the individual produced more final consonant deletion errors in morphologically complex words ( prays→[pre]) compared to homophones ( praise→[pre]). Second, morphological deletion errors were found to occur at comparable rates for inflected regular verbs ( sinnedsin) and inflected irregular verbs ( wonwin), whereas the analogous error (e.g. tontin) never occurred on the monomorphemic pairs. In order to examine differences within each category, we used a past-tense elicitation task designed to analyse the effect of differences in morphophonological pattern frequency on accuracy and error patterns in production. We found production of both regular and irregular verbs was affected by the extent to which different morphophonological patterns are supported in the language (i.e. the number of phonologically similar words within the lexicon which take the same inflectional change). These results provide evidence that morphophonological patterns are encoded in a way that impact morphological production, a finding which has both clinical and theoretical implications.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          8802622
          26996
          Clin Linguist Phon
          Clin Linguist Phon
          Clinical linguistics & phonetics
          0269-9206
          1464-5076
          19 December 2018
          04 October 2018
          2019
          01 January 2020
          : 33
          : 1-2
          : 68-94
          Affiliations
          Department of Communicative Sciences and Disorders, New York University, New York, USA
          Author notes
          CONTACT Stacey Rimikis Stacey.rimikis@ 123456nyu.edu , Department of Communicative Sciences and Disorders, New York University, 665 Broadway, Suite 900, New York, NY 10012 USA
          Article
          PMC6447469 PMC6447469 6447469 nihpa1002351
          10.1080/02699206.2018.1519727
          6447469
          30285489
          1e402f46-6823-4a2f-853b-d4251ca86801
          History
          Categories
          Article

          Morphology,aphasia,production,morphophonology,phonology
          Morphology, aphasia, production, morphophonology, phonology

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