Time reference in Spanish and Catalan non-fluent aphasia

被引:23
|
作者
Martinez-Ferreiro, Silvia [1 ]
Bastiaanse, Roelien [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Groningen, Ctr Language & Cognit CLCG, NL-9700 AS Groningen, Netherlands
关键词
Time reference; Tense; Non-fluent aphasia; Catalan; Spanish; AGRAMMATIC PRODUCTION; GRAMMATICAL MORPHEMES; FUNCTIONAL CATEGORIES; VERB INFLECTIONS; TENSE; AGREEMENT; ENGLISH; MORPHOLOGY; SPEAKERS; COMPREHENSION;
D O I
10.1016/j.lingua.2013.09.003
中图分类号
H0 [语言学];
学科分类号
030303 ; 0501 ; 050102 ;
摘要
The vulnerability of time reference, either marked by means of verbal morphology or by adverbs, has been established in an extensive array of languages in.agrammatic aphasia. Recent studies (Bastiaanse, 2008; Lee et al., 2008; Nanousi et al., 2006; Martinez-Ferreiro, 2010; Yarbay Duman and Bastiaanse, 2009; among others) have determined that far from being general, the observed deficit is sensitive to tense differences with a clear asymmetry between past and non-past forms. To account for these findings, Bastiaanse et al. (2011) formulated the PAst Discourse Linking Hypothesis (PADILIH), in line with Avrutin's (2000) claim that discourse linking is impaired in Broca's aphasia. Past forms are impaired in opposition to non-past forms due to the fact that the former are discourse linked. However, this hypothesis entails further predictions: if the problem with tense is restricted to discourse linking, we expect present and future forms to be spared or, at least, damaged to the same extent. In this paper, we investigate time reference in Catalan and Spanish using a sentence completion task with pictures and a sentence-to-picture-matching task (adapted from the TART; Bastiaanse et al., 2008). The results confirm the predicted deficit: forms referring to the past are more impaired than forms referring to non-past, that is, tenses referring to the present and future were better preserved. However, in comprehension, asymmetries arise between present and future forms. Implications for the PADILIH are discussed. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:88 / 105
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Time reference in French-speaking people with fluent and non-fluent aphasia (part II): a cluster analysis
    Cordonier, Natacha
    Ericson, Celia
    Schneider, Laurence
    Bellmann, Anne
    Fossard, Marion
    APHASIOLOGY, 2024,
  • [2] Non-fluent aphasia in a polysynthetic language: five case studies
    Nedergaard, Johanne S. K.
    Martinez-Ferreiro, Silvia
    Fortescue, Michael D.
    Boye, Kasper
    APHASIOLOGY, 2020, 34 (06) : 654 - 673
  • [3] Non-fluent aphasia in Ibero-Romance: a review of morphosyntactic deficits
    Martinez-Ferreiro, Silvia
    de Aguiar, Vania
    Rofes, Adria
    APHASIOLOGY, 2015, 29 (01) : 101 - 126
  • [4] Time reference in French-speaking people with fluent and non-fluent aphasia (part I): tense dissociations, task effects and cognitive predictors
    Cordonier, Natacha
    Fossard, Marion
    APHASIOLOGY, 2024,
  • [5] Time Reference in Fluent Aphasia: Evidence from Serbian
    Kljajevic, Vanja
    Bastiaanse, Roelien
    MULTIDISCIPLINARY ASPECTS OF TIME AND TIME PERCEPTION, 2011, 6789 : 258 - +
  • [6] Conditional and future tense impairment in non-fluent aphasia
    Rofes, Adria
    Bastiaanse, Roelien
    Martinez-Ferreiro, Silvia
    APHASIOLOGY, 2014, 28 (01) : 99 - 115
  • [7] Time reference decoupled from tense in agrammatic and fluent aphasia
    Bos, Laura S.
    Bastiaanse, Roelien
    APHASIOLOGY, 2014, 28 (05) : 533 - 553
  • [8] Production of Sentential Negation in German and Italian Non-fluent Aphasia
    Fyndanis, Valantis
    Miceli, Gabriele
    Capasso, Rita
    Killmer, Helene
    Malefaki, Sonia
    Grohmann, Kleanthes K.
    JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLINGUISTIC RESEARCH, 2023, 52 (02) : 497 - 524
  • [9] 'To be' or not 'to be': an analysis of copula production and omission in people with non-fluent aphasia
    Smith, Giuditta
    Kershaw, Charlotte
    Brunetto, Valentina
    Garraffa, Maria
    APHASIOLOGY, 2024, 38 (07) : 1139 - 1156
  • [10] Speech errors in progressive non-fluent aphasia
    Ash, Sharon
    McMillan, Corey
    Gunawardena, Delani
    Avants, Brian
    Morgan, Brianna
    Khan, Alea
    Moore, Peachie
    Gee, James
    Grossman, Murray
    BRAIN AND LANGUAGE, 2010, 113 (01) : 13 - 20