Comprehension of Idioms in Turkish Aphasic Participants

被引:0
作者
Burcu Aydin
Muzaffer Barin
Oktay Yagiz
机构
[1] Adnan Menderes University,Department of English Language Education, Faculty of Education
[2] Atatürk University,Department of English Language and Literature, Faculty of Letters
[3] Atatürk University,Department of English Language Education, Faculty of Education
来源
Journal of Psycholinguistic Research | 2017年 / 46卷
关键词
Aphasia; Brain damage; Idiom comprehension; Turkish idioms; Graded Salience Hypothesis; Figurative language; Semantic processing;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Brain damaged participants offer an opportunity to evaluate the cognitive and linguistic processes and make assumptions about how the brain works. Cognitive linguists have been investigating the underlying mechanisms of idiom comprehension to unravel the ongoing debate on hemispheric specialization in figurative language comprehension. The aim of this study is to evaluate and compare the comprehension of idiomatic expressions in left brain damaged (LBD) aphasic, right brain damaged (RBD) and healthy control participants. Idiom comprehension in eleven LBD aphasic participants, ten RBD participants and eleven healthy control participants were assessed with three tasks: String to Picture Matching Task, Literal Sentence Comprehension Task and Oral Idiom Definition Task. The results of the tasks showed that in overall idiom comprehension category, the left brain-damaged aphasic participants interpret idioms more literally compared to right brain-damaged participants. What is more, there is a significant difference in opaque idiom comprehension implying that left brain-damaged aphasic participants perform worse compared to right brain-damaged participants. On the other hand, there is no statistically significant difference in scores of transparent idiom comprehension between the left brain-damaged aphasic and right brain-damaged participants. This result also contribute to the idea that while figurative processing system is damaged in LBD aphasics, the literal comprehension mechanism is spared to some extent. The results of this study support the view that idiom comprehension sites are mainly left lateralized. Furthermore, the results of this study are in consistence with the Giora’s Graded Salience Hypothesis.
引用
收藏
页码:1485 / 1507
页数:22
相关论文
共 45 条
  • [21] The influence of idiomatic salience during the comprehension of ambiguous idioms by patients with schizophrenia
    Iakimova, Galina
    Passerieux, Christine
    Denhiere, Guy
    Laurent, Jean-Paul
    Vistoli, Damien
    Vilain, Jeanne
    Hardy-Bayle, Marie-Christine
    PSYCHIATRY RESEARCH, 2010, 177 (1-2) : 46 - 54
  • [22] Dissociations and associations of performance in syntactic comprehension in aphasia and their implications for the nature of aphasic deficits
    Caplan, David
    Michaud, Jennifer
    Hufford, Rebecca
    BRAIN AND LANGUAGE, 2013, 127 (01) : 21 - 33
  • [23] Storage costs and heuristics interact to produce patterns of aphasic sentence comprehension performance
    Clark, David Glenn
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2012, 3
  • [24] Determinants of sentence comprehension in aphasic patients in sentence-picture matching tasks
    Caplan, D
    Waters, GS
    Hildebrandt, N
    JOURNAL OF SPEECH LANGUAGE AND HEARING RESEARCH, 1997, 40 (03): : 542 - 555
  • [25] Auditory comprehension problems in aphasia from the perspective of aphasic persons and their families and friends
    LeDorze, G
    Brassard, C
    Larfeuil, C
    Allaire, J
    DISABILITY AND REHABILITATION, 1996, 18 (11) : 550 - 558
  • [27] Temporal information processing as a basis for auditory comprehension: clinical evidence from aphasic patients
    Oron, Anna
    Szymaszek, Aneta
    Szelag, Elzbieta
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LANGUAGE & COMMUNICATION DISORDERS, 2015, 50 (05) : 604 - 615
  • [28] The Treatment Based on Temporal Information Processing Reduces Speech Comprehension Deficits in Aphasic Subjects
    Szymaszek, Aneta
    Wolak, Tomasz
    Szelag, Elzbieta
    FRONTIERS IN AGING NEUROSCIENCE, 2017, 9
  • [29] Rehabilitation of asyntactic comprehension in post-stroke aphasic individuals: A systematic review of the literature
    Baglione, Heloise
    Coulombe, Valerie
    Poirier, Sarah-Eve
    Monetta, Laura
    GERIATRIE ET PSYCHOLOGIE NEUROPSYCHIATRIE DU VIEILLISSEMENT, 2022, 20 (04) : 483 - 496
  • [30] Comprehension and storage of four serially presented radio news stories by mild aphasic subjects
    Yasuda, K
    Nakamura, T
    Beckman, B
    BRAIN AND LANGUAGE, 2000, 75 (03) : 399 - 415