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Cappelle, Bert; Shtyrov, Yury; Pulvermuller, Friedemann – Brain and Language, 2010
There is a considerable linguistic debate on whether phrasal verbs (e.g., "turn up," "break down") are processed as two separate words connected by a syntactic rule or whether they form a single lexical unit. Moreover, views differ on whether meaning (transparency vs. opacity) plays a role in determining their syntactically-connected or lexical…
Descriptors: Phrase Structure, Verbs, Morphemes, Neurology
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Faroqi-Shah, Yasmeen; Dickey, Michael Walsh – Brain and Language, 2009
Agrammatic aphasic individuals exhibit marked production deficits for tense morphology. This paper presents three experiments examining whether a group of English-speaking agrammatic individuals (n = 10) exhibit parallel deficits in their comprehension of tense. Results from two comprehension experiments (on-line grammaticality judgment studies)…
Descriptors: Verbs, Morphemes, Aphasia, Morphology (Languages)
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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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Linares, Rafael Enrique; Rodriguez-Fornells, Antoni; Clahsen, Harald – Brain and Language, 2006
This study presents results from a nonce-word elicited production task and a reading experiment using event-related brain potentials (ERPs) investigating finite forms of Spanish verbs which consist of marked stems and regular person and number agreement suffixes. The first experiment showed that unmarked stems are productively extended to nonce…
Descriptors: Spanish, Verbs, Morphemes, Suffixes
Braber, N.; Patterson, K.; Ellis, K.; Lambon Ralph, M.A. – Brain and Language, 2005
A previous study of 10 patients with Broca's aphasia demonstrated that the advantage for producing the past tense of irregular over regular verbs exhibited by these patients was eliminated when the two sets of past-tense forms were matched for phonological complexity (Bird, Lambon Ralph, Seidenberg, McClelland, & Patterson, 2003). The…
Descriptors: Patients, Morphemes, Sentences, Aphasia
Lambon Ralph, M.A.; Braber, N.; McClelland, J.L.; Patterson, K. – Brain and Language, 2005
The disadvantage in producing the past tense of regular relative to irregular verbs shown by some patients with non-fluent aphasia has been alternatively attributed (a) to the failure of a specific rule-based morphological mechanism, or (b) to a more generalised phonological impairment that penalises regular verbs more than irregular owing to the…
Descriptors: Verbs, Patients, Aphasia, Phonology
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Colombo, Lucia; Laudanna, Alessandro; De Martino, Maria; Brivio, Cristina – Brain and Language, 2004
In the present study we have investigated the acquisition of the past participle of Italian verbs of the second (including mostly irregular verbs) and third (including mostly regular verbs) conjugations in school age children, and with simulations with an artificial neural network. We aimed to verify the extent to which children are sensitive to…
Descriptors: Verbs, Morphemes, Italian, Children
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Moscoso del Prado Martin, Fermin; Ernestus, Mirjam; Harald Baayen, R. – Brain and Language, 2004
In this paper, we show that both token and type-based effects in lexical processing can result from a single, token-based, system, and therefore, do not necessarily reflect different levels of processing. We report three Simple Recurrent Networks modeling Dutch past-tense formation. These networks show token-based frequency effects and type-based…
Descriptors: Indo European Languages, Morphemes, Language Processing, Verbs
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Wenzlaff, Michaela; Clahsen, Harald – Brain and Language, 2005
This study presents results from sentence-completion and grammaticality-judgement tasks with seven German-speaking agrammatic aphasics and seven age-matched control subjects examining verb finiteness marking and verb-second (V2) placement. The patients were found to be selectively impaired in tense marking in the face of preserved mood and…
Descriptors: Verbs, German, Grammar, Aphasia
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Wenzlaff, Michaela; Clahsen, Harald – Brain and Language, 2004
This study presents results from sentence-completion and grammaticality-judgment tasks with 7 German-speaking agrammatic aphasics and 7 age-matched control subjects examining tense and subject-verb agreement marking. For both experimental tasks, we found that the aphasics achieved high correctness scores for agreement, while tense marking was…
Descriptors: Grammar, German, Aphasia, Morphemes
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Schirmeier, Matthias K.; Derwing, Bruce L.; Libben, Gary – Brain and Language, 2004
Two types of experiments investigate the visual on-line and off-line processing of German ver-verbs (e.g., verbittern "to embitte"). In Experiments 1 and 2 (morphological priming), latency patterns revealed the existence of facilitation effects for the morphological conditions (BITTER-VERBITTERN and BITTERN-VERBITTERN) as compared to the neutral…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Morphology (Languages), Semantics, German