Processing of disyllabic compound words in Chinese aphasia: Evidence for the processing limitations account

Chia Lin Lee, Daisy L. Hung, John K.P. Tse, Chia Ying Lee, Jie Li Tsai, Ovid J.L. Tzeng

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Scopus citations

Abstract

The current study addresses the debate between so-called 'structural' and 'processing limitation' accounts of aphasia, i.e., whether language impairments reflect the 'loss' of linguistic knowledge or its representations, or instead reflect a limitation in processing resources. Confrontation-naming task and category-judgment tasks were used to examine and compare the performance of non-fluent and fluent aphasics on different compound types of nouns and verbs. We demonstrate that aphasic patients' performance is modulated by the canonicity of the particular compound type, a result that holds true even for the category in which patients show a 'selective category deficit.' These findings weigh against the 'loss' of linguistic representations as the underlying cause of noun-verb deficits, instead supporting a 'processing limitations' approach.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)168-184
Number of pages17
JournalBrain and Language
Volume92
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2005

Keywords

  • Aphasia
  • Chinese
  • Double dissociation
  • Linguistic category
  • Nouns
  • Processing limitation
  • Selective deficit
  • Structural deficit
  • Verbs

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