Prepositions and pronouns in connected discourse of individuals with aphasia

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Prepositions and pronouns in connected discourse of individuals with aphasia. / Martinez-Ferreiro, Silvia; Ishkhanyan, Byurakn; Rosell-Clarí, Vicente; Boye, Kasper.

I: Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, Bind 33, Nr. 6, 2019, s. 497-517.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Martinez-Ferreiro, S, Ishkhanyan, B, Rosell-Clarí, V & Boye, K 2019, 'Prepositions and pronouns in connected discourse of individuals with aphasia', Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, bind 33, nr. 6, s. 497-517. https://doi.org/10.1080/02699206.2018.1551935

APA

Martinez-Ferreiro, S., Ishkhanyan, B., Rosell-Clarí, V., & Boye, K. (2019). Prepositions and pronouns in connected discourse of individuals with aphasia. Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 33(6), 497-517. https://doi.org/10.1080/02699206.2018.1551935

Vancouver

Martinez-Ferreiro S, Ishkhanyan B, Rosell-Clarí V, Boye K. Prepositions and pronouns in connected discourse of individuals with aphasia. Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics. 2019;33(6):497-517. https://doi.org/10.1080/02699206.2018.1551935

Author

Martinez-Ferreiro, Silvia ; Ishkhanyan, Byurakn ; Rosell-Clarí, Vicente ; Boye, Kasper. / Prepositions and pronouns in connected discourse of individuals with aphasia. I: Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics. 2019 ; Bind 33, Nr. 6. s. 497-517.

Bibtex

@article{5d83a2c4a13947d08c576726e9b9f750,
title = "Prepositions and pronouns in connected discourse of individuals with aphasia",
abstract = "The lexical-grammatical divide has been a widely addressed topic in aphasia. Speech parts are generally classified as either belonging to a lexical or a grammatical category based on the frequency of acquisition of new members in their paradigms (open vs. closed classes), thus neglecting heterogeneity within categories. Such an approach has led to contradictory findings. First, prepositions form closed classes, but are classically taken as lexical items. Pronouns, also belonging to a closed class, are analyzed as grammatical elements. Second, both within the group of prepositions and pronouns, forms with different syntactic and semantic properties co-exist.Following the theoretical notions granted by a usage-based theory of grammar, the ProGram theory, and taking focalizability as the classification criteria, we hypothesize that individuals with non-fluent aphasias will experience more severe problems with grammatical prepositions and pronouns, given that these elements are secondary and dependent, whereas informants in the fluent group will experience more severe trouble with lexical forms, potentially primary and independent. We focused on the performance of nine Spanish-speaking individuals with aphasia from the Rosell (2005) corpus. Samples of 300 words were transcribed and analyzed. As predicted, grammatical prepositions were found to be more severely compromised in the speech output of individuals with deficits of motor predominance, whereas lexical prepositions are more severely affected in individuals with deficits of sensory predominance. Although less conclusively, the same tendency holds in the case of pronouns. Our results, consistent with previous findings, confirm the heterogeneity of prepositions and pronouns, which should no longer be analyzed en bloc.",
author = "Silvia Martinez-Ferreiro and Byurakn Ishkhanyan and Vicente Rosell-Clar{\'i} and Kasper Boye",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1080/02699206.2018.1551935",
language = "English",
volume = "33",
pages = "497--517",
journal = "Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics",
issn = "0269-9206",
publisher = "Taylor & Francis",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Prepositions and pronouns in connected discourse of individuals with aphasia

AU - Martinez-Ferreiro, Silvia

AU - Ishkhanyan, Byurakn

AU - Rosell-Clarí, Vicente

AU - Boye, Kasper

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - The lexical-grammatical divide has been a widely addressed topic in aphasia. Speech parts are generally classified as either belonging to a lexical or a grammatical category based on the frequency of acquisition of new members in their paradigms (open vs. closed classes), thus neglecting heterogeneity within categories. Such an approach has led to contradictory findings. First, prepositions form closed classes, but are classically taken as lexical items. Pronouns, also belonging to a closed class, are analyzed as grammatical elements. Second, both within the group of prepositions and pronouns, forms with different syntactic and semantic properties co-exist.Following the theoretical notions granted by a usage-based theory of grammar, the ProGram theory, and taking focalizability as the classification criteria, we hypothesize that individuals with non-fluent aphasias will experience more severe problems with grammatical prepositions and pronouns, given that these elements are secondary and dependent, whereas informants in the fluent group will experience more severe trouble with lexical forms, potentially primary and independent. We focused on the performance of nine Spanish-speaking individuals with aphasia from the Rosell (2005) corpus. Samples of 300 words were transcribed and analyzed. As predicted, grammatical prepositions were found to be more severely compromised in the speech output of individuals with deficits of motor predominance, whereas lexical prepositions are more severely affected in individuals with deficits of sensory predominance. Although less conclusively, the same tendency holds in the case of pronouns. Our results, consistent with previous findings, confirm the heterogeneity of prepositions and pronouns, which should no longer be analyzed en bloc.

AB - The lexical-grammatical divide has been a widely addressed topic in aphasia. Speech parts are generally classified as either belonging to a lexical or a grammatical category based on the frequency of acquisition of new members in their paradigms (open vs. closed classes), thus neglecting heterogeneity within categories. Such an approach has led to contradictory findings. First, prepositions form closed classes, but are classically taken as lexical items. Pronouns, also belonging to a closed class, are analyzed as grammatical elements. Second, both within the group of prepositions and pronouns, forms with different syntactic and semantic properties co-exist.Following the theoretical notions granted by a usage-based theory of grammar, the ProGram theory, and taking focalizability as the classification criteria, we hypothesize that individuals with non-fluent aphasias will experience more severe problems with grammatical prepositions and pronouns, given that these elements are secondary and dependent, whereas informants in the fluent group will experience more severe trouble with lexical forms, potentially primary and independent. We focused on the performance of nine Spanish-speaking individuals with aphasia from the Rosell (2005) corpus. Samples of 300 words were transcribed and analyzed. As predicted, grammatical prepositions were found to be more severely compromised in the speech output of individuals with deficits of motor predominance, whereas lexical prepositions are more severely affected in individuals with deficits of sensory predominance. Although less conclusively, the same tendency holds in the case of pronouns. Our results, consistent with previous findings, confirm the heterogeneity of prepositions and pronouns, which should no longer be analyzed en bloc.

U2 - 10.1080/02699206.2018.1551935

DO - 10.1080/02699206.2018.1551935

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 30526143

VL - 33

SP - 497

EP - 517

JO - Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics

JF - Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics

SN - 0269-9206

IS - 6

ER -

ID: 210156746