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

      Brain and Language
      Aged, Aphasia, Broca, physiopathology, Brain, Female, Humans, Language Disorders, diagnosis, Neuropsychological Tests

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          Abstract

          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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          Author and article information

          Journal
          9070419
          10.1006/brln.1997.1795

          Aged,Aphasia, Broca,physiopathology,Brain,Female,Humans,Language Disorders,diagnosis,Neuropsychological Tests

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