Lightning talk: Processing of verbal inflection in people with agrammatic aphasia: a Distributed Morphology approach.

People with agrammatic aphasia present a language disorder caused by a brain injury. There is substantial cross-linguistic evidence that morphosyntax of verbs is impaired in agrammatic aphasia and that not all verb inflections are affected equally, with tense morphology being especially vulnerable (Benedet et al., 1998; Caramazza & Hillis, 1991, among others). The reasons for this dissociation are still under discussion. Our work aims to develop a battery of tests that study the production and comprehension of sentences, manipulating Tense and Agreement, to obtain evidence of this deficit in Argentinian Spanish and discuss the different theoretical explanations within the Distributed Morphology (DM) framework.
The Tree-Pruning Hypothesis (Friedmann & Grodzinsky, 1997), asserts that the problem is due to a pruning of the syntactic tree at the Time node, but if this were to be the case, Agreement should also be impaired. Following this idea, Gavarró & Martínez-Ferreiro (2007) suggest that Agreement would be spared because the relation would hold between V and a functional category other than T when T is pruned (taking the sentential structure proposed in Cinque, 1999), but they don’t explain how this process would take place.	
The DM framework (Embick, 2015) could be adequate to account for this particular deficit, since it poses that Agreement morphemes are added to the structures in a postsyntactic affixation operation at the Phonological Form (PF) branch of the grammar, prior to Vocabulary Insertion. If the different morphemes are added in different stages, it could be expected for them to have different patterns of impairment. 
References
Benedet  M.J.,  Christiansen  J.A.,  Goodglass  H.  (1998).  A  cross-linguistic  study  of  grammatical  morphology  in Spanish-and English-speaking agrammatic patients. Cortex 34, 309–336.
Caramazza, A., Hillis, A.  (1991). Lexical organization of  nouns and verbs in the brain.  Nature, 349(6312), 788-790.
Embick, D., 2015.The Morpheme.A Theoretical Introduction. Berlin: DeGruyter Mouton.
Faroqi-Shah, Y. and Thompson, C. (2007). Verb inflections in agrammatic aphasia: Encoding of tense features. Journal of Memory and Language, 56(1), 129-151.
Friedmann, N.,  Grodzinsky, Y.  (1997).  Tense  and  agreement  in  agrammatic  production:  Pruning  the  syntactic tree. Brain and Language, 56, 397–425.
Gavarró,  A.,  &  Martínez-Ferreiro,  S.  (2007).  Tense  and  agreement  impairment  in  Ibero-Romance.  Journal  of psycholinguistic research, 36, 1, 25-46.
Info
Tag:
19.11.2020
Anfangszeit:
15:25
Dauer:
00:10
Raum:
Ruqaiya Hasan
Track:
Neuro- and Psycholinguistics
Sprache:
mul
Links:
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