The processing of Prepositional compounds (typical Neo-latin noun noun modifications where a head noun is modified by a prepositional phrase, e.g., midino a vento, windmill) was preliminarily studied with a group of six agrammatic aphasic patients, and, in more detail, with a further agrammatic patient (MB). Omission was the most frequent error type in naming, whereas in the other tasks (repetition, reading, writing, and completion) errors were mostly substitutions of the target preposition. This happened even with fully lexicalized compound forms, i.e., those forms where the linking preposition is syntactically and semantically opaque. These findings are interpreted in terms of a dual-route theory of lexical access to morphologically complex words. (c) 2005 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Mondini, S., Luzzatti, C., Saletta, P., Allamano, N., Semenza, C. (2005). Mental representation of prepositional compounds: Evidence from Italian agrammatic patients. BRAIN AND LANGUAGE, 94(2), 178-187 [10.1016/j.bandl.2004.12.005].

Mental representation of prepositional compounds: Evidence from Italian agrammatic patients

LUZZATTI, CLAUDIO GIUSEPPE;
2005

Abstract

The processing of Prepositional compounds (typical Neo-latin noun noun modifications where a head noun is modified by a prepositional phrase, e.g., midino a vento, windmill) was preliminarily studied with a group of six agrammatic aphasic patients, and, in more detail, with a further agrammatic patient (MB). Omission was the most frequent error type in naming, whereas in the other tasks (repetition, reading, writing, and completion) errors were mostly substitutions of the target preposition. This happened even with fully lexicalized compound forms, i.e., those forms where the linking preposition is syntactically and semantically opaque. These findings are interpreted in terms of a dual-route theory of lexical access to morphologically complex words. (c) 2005 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
aphasia; compounds; prepositions; dual route
English
2005
94
2
178
187
none
Mondini, S., Luzzatti, C., Saletta, P., Allamano, N., Semenza, C. (2005). Mental representation of prepositional compounds: Evidence from Italian agrammatic patients. BRAIN AND LANGUAGE, 94(2), 178-187 [10.1016/j.bandl.2004.12.005].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/673
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