Background: The label “fluent aphasia” applies to different aphasic syndromes characterised by fluent speech with difficulties in lexical retrieval and/or grammatical processing. Aims …
W Huber - Discourse ability and brain damage: Theoretical and …, 1990 - Springer
During the last two decades, most psycholinguistic research on aphasia started from the assumption that only elementary linguistic units and regularities are worth studying …
J Webster, S Franklin, D Howard - Journal of Neurolinguistics, 2007 - Elsevier
Sentence production difficulties are a common feature of aphasia. The aim of the current study was to investigate the processes involved in sentence production. An analysis of …
G Le Dorze, JL Nespoulous - Brain and language, 1989 - Elsevier
This study has two objectives:(1) to determine through the analysis of surface manifestations of anomia whether one or several anomic syndromes exist,(2) to identify the psycholinguistic …
W Huber, J Gleber - Brain and Language, 1982 - Elsevier
A scrambled Story Test was given to four subgroups of aphasic patients and to one group each of right-hemisphere-damaged patients and of normal controls. Subjects were asked to …
This study explored lexical-syntactic information–syntactic information that is stored in the lexicon–and its relation to syntactic and lexical impairments in aphasia. We focused on two …
Five aphasic subjects, who demonstrated agrammatic speech, and eight control subjects were presented with a sentence-picture matching task in which the factors of syntactic …
JA Christiansen - Brain and Language, 1995 - Elsevier
Aphasic patients have been generally assumed to produce coherent narratives, despite their numerous surface structure deficits. The current study is designed to analyze three types of …
C Coelho, L Flewellyn - Aphasiology, 2003 - Taylor & Francis
Background: It has been suggested that individuals with fluent aphasia demonstrate microlinguistic impairments and relatively preserved macrolinguistic abilities (Glosser & …