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Abstract:
Agrammatic aphasics have problems comprehending
sentences with movement like (1) [see example 1 below]. In
a number of off-line tasks, such as picture matching, agrammatic
Broca's aphasics perform at chance in their comprehension of
object relatives (Grodzinsky, 2000, and references
therein). This paper presents evidence from an on-line
anomaly detection task regarding agrammatic aphasics' real-time
comprehension of sentences with movement. The results
suggest that aphasics' capacity for gap-filling is relatively
preserved for non-reversible object relatives like (1).
Such a result is surprising if agrammatics are unable to
represent or accurately resolve movement dependencies.
8 previously diagnosed agrammatic aphasics and a
group of young normal controls listened to sentences like (2)
[see below] and were asked to monitor them for anomalies.
They were instructed to press a button as soon as the sentence
started to "sound strange." If agrammatic aphasics are unable to
represent movement dependencies (Grodzinsky, 1990, 2000) or
unable to correctly resolve them (Mauner et al., 1993), their
detection of the anomaly in the object-relative condition (b)
should be significantly less accurate than their detection of the
same anomaly in the non-movement conjoined condition (d).
Further, if aphasics rely on extralinguistic heuristics to guide
their comprehension of movement constructions (Grodzinsky, 2000),
they should show little evidence of on-line anomaly detection
even when they accurately reject (b).
Subjects listened to 24 sentences like (2)
interspersed among 48 fillers. Accuracy in detecting the
anomalies was recorded, as were reaction times in rejecting
them. The aphasic subjects rejected both (b) and (d) at
levels well above chance, 73% for (b) and 81% for (d).
Further, they showed only small differences from the normal
controls in their rejection rates for both (b) and (d). In
addition, they showed evidence of being able to detect the
anomalies on-line: while aphasics rejected (b) significantly more
slowly than they rejected (d), the majority of rejections for (b)
came before the end of the sentence.
These results suggest that for semantically
non-reversible sentences at least, agrammatic aphasics retain
significant on-line processing abilities. This in turn
suggests that aphasics either retain the capacity to represent
and resolve filler-gap dependencies or are able to apply
extralinguistic heuristics to comprehending such sentences very
quickly. Time permitting, implications of these results for
the nature of aphasic comprehension deficits and their treatment
will be discussed, as will parallel results from a group of
fluent Wernicke's aphasics.
Examples
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(1)
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The girl put on a shirt that her
mother picked for her before church this morning.
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(2)
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a.
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The girl put on a shirt that her
mother picked for her before church this morning.
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b.
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The girl put on a shirt that her
mother fried for her before church this morning.
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c.
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The girl put on a skirt and her
mother picked a shirt for her before church this
morning.
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d.
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The girl put on a skirt and her
mother fried a shirt for her before church this
morning.
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