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Showing 151 to 165 of 235 results Save | Export
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Moses, Melanie S.; Nickels, Lyndsey A.; Sheard, Christine – Brain and Language, 2004
In this study, the recurrent perseverative errors produced by 44 speakers without impairment were examined in picture naming and reading aloud tasks under a fast response deadline. The proportion of perseverative relative to non-perseverative errors was greater in picture naming, the more error-prone task, than in reading aloud. Additionally,…
Descriptors: Aphasia, Language Processing, Error Patterns
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Rider, Jill Davis; Wright, Heather Harris; Marshall, Robert C.; Page, Judith L. – American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 2008
Purpose: Semantic feature analysis (SFA) was used to determine whether training contextually related words would improve the discourse of individuals with nonfluent aphasia in preselected contexts. Method: A modified multiple-probes-across-behaviors design was used to train target words using SFA in 3 adults with nonfluent aphasia. Pretreatment,…
Descriptors: Semantics, Aphasia, Vocabulary, Adults
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Kok, Peter; van Doorn, Arna; Kolk, Herman – Brain and Language, 2007
In this study we investigate the production of verb inflection in agrammatic aphasia. In a number of recent studies it has been argued that tense inflection is harder to produce for agrammatic individuals than agreement inflection. However, results are still inconclusive, at least for Dutch and German. Here, we report three experiments in which…
Descriptors: Word Order, Language Processing, Verbs, Morphemes
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Monaghan, Padraic; Shillcock, Richard – Brain and Language, 2007
Is it necessary to posit separate, explicit distinctions between representations in order to account for dissociations between consonant and vowel processing? We argue that a cognitive model of speech production based on cumulative lower-level properties is not only sufficient but more parsimonious in accounting for aphasic and dysgraphic patient…
Descriptors: Phonemes, Vowels, Aphasia, Learning Disabilities
Misiurski, Cara; Blumstein, Sheila E.; Rissman, Jesse; Berman, Daniel – Brain and Language, 2005
This study examined the effects that the acoustic-phonetic structure of a stimulus exerts on the processes by which lexical candidates compete for activation. An auditory lexical decision paradigm was used to investigate whether shortening the VOT of an initial voiceless stop consonant in a real word results in the activation of the…
Descriptors: Semantics, Patients, Aphasia, Language Processing
Caramazza, A.; Capasso, R.; Capitani, E.; Miceli, G. – Brain and Language, 2005
We tested the core prediction of the Trace Deletion Hypothesis (TDH) of agrammatic Broca's aphasia, which contends that such patients' comprehension performance is normal for active reversible sentences but at chance level for passive reversible sentences. We analyzed the comprehension performance of 38 Italian Broca's aphasics with verified…
Descriptors: Patients, Language Processing, Sentences, Aphasia
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Roelofs, Ardi – Psychological Review, 2004
B. Rapp and M. Goldrick (2000) claimed that the lexical and mixed error biases in picture naming by aphasic and nonaphasic speakers argue against models that assume a feedforward-only relationship between lexical items and their sounds in spoken word production. The author contests this claim by showing that a feedforward-only model like WEAVER++…
Descriptors: Oral Language, Language Processing, Aphasia, Bias
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Nakano, Hiroko; Blumstein, Sheila E. – Brain and Language, 2004
This study investigated how normal subjects and Broca's and Wernicke's aphasics integrate thematic information incrementally using syntax, lexical-semantics, and pragmatics in a simple active declarative sentence. Three priming experiments were conducted using an auditory lexical decision task in which subjects made a lexical decision on a…
Descriptors: Aphasia, Language Processing, Syntax, Semantics
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Wilshire, Carolyn E.; Saffran, Eleanor M. – Cognition, 2005
Two fluent aphasics, IG and GL, performed a phonological priming task in which they repeated an auditory prime then named a target picture. The two patients both had selective deficits in word production: they were at or near ceiling on lexical comprehension tasks, but were significantly impaired in picture naming. IG's naming errors included both…
Descriptors: Aphasia, Language Processing, Recognition (Psychology), Comparative Analysis
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Linebarger, Marcia; McCall, Denise; Virata, Telana; Berndt, Rita Sloan – Brain and Language, 2007
Investigations of language processing in aphasia have increasingly implicated performance factors such as slowed activation and/or rapid decay of linguistic information. This approach is supported by studies utilizing a communication system ("SentenceShaper"[TM]) which functions as a "processing prosthesis." The system may reduce the impact of…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Aphasia, Performance Factors, Short Term Memory
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Rindflesch, Thomas; Reeves, Jennifer E. – Language Sciences, 1992
Reexamines data from Caplan and Hildebrandt (1988) with a new set of background assumptions and concludes a Government-Binding-based account is not supported. Instead, deficits observed in the process of infinitival complement constructions are attributed to patient inability to fully access the data structure required to support a proposed…
Descriptors: Aphasia, Case Studies, Language Processing, Linguistic Theory
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Arevalo, A.; Perani, D.; Cappa, S. F.; Butler, A.; Bates, E.; Dronkers, N. – Brain and Language, 2007
The processing of words and pictures representing actions and objects was tested in 21 aphasic patients and 20 healthy controls across three word production tasks: picture-naming (PN), single word reading (WR) and word repetition (WRP). Analysis (1) targeted task and lexical category (noun-verb), revealing worse performance on PN and verb items…
Descriptors: Nouns, Verbs, Aphasia, Patients
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Goral, Mira; Levy, Erika S.; Obler, Loraine K. – International Journal of Bilingualism, 2002
Discusses aphasia, the language deficit resulting from damage to the language centers of the brain, in order to evaluate how research on bilingual and polyglot aphasic individuals has contributed to our knowledge of the representation of language and languages in neurologically intact humans' brains. Examines the literature on treating lateral…
Descriptors: Aphasia, Brain, Language Impairments, Language Processing
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Barde, Laura H. F.; Schwartz, Myrna F.; Boronat, Consuelo B. – Brain and Language, 2006
Individuals with agrammatic aphasia may have difficulty with verb production in comparison to nouns. Additionally, they may have greater difficulty producing verbs that have fewer semantic components (i.e., are semantically "light") compared to verbs that have greater semantic weight. A connectionist verb-production model proposed by Gordon and…
Descriptors: Semantics, Verbs, Aphasia, Nouns
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Milman, Lisa H.; Dickey, Michael Walsh; Thompson, Cynthia K. – Brain and Language, 2008
Hierarchical models of agrammatism propose that sentence production deficits can be accounted for in terms of clausal syntactic structure [Friedmann, N., & Grodzinsky, Y. (1997). "Tense and agreement in agrammatic production: Pruning the syntactic tree." "Brain and Language, 56", 397-425; Hagiwara, H. (1995). "The breakdown of functional…
Descriptors: Verbs, Syntax, Patients, Program Effectiveness
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