Compounding in Aphasia: A Cross-Linguistic Review

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2007
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Swarthmore College. Dept. of Linguistics
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Thesis (B.A.)
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en_US
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Full copyright to this work is retained by the student author. It may only be used for non-commercial, research, and educational purposes. All other uses are restricted.
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Abstract
Psycholinguistic data from patients with aphasia, a family of language disorders caused by brain damage, may help determine how compound words are represented in the lexicon. The errors produced by such patients may reflect whole-word storage or rule-based composition of compounds. Experimental investigations of compounding may also shed light on the deficits caused by aphasia. The noun-verb double dissociation observed in certain subtypes of aphasia may apply to the noun and verb components of compound words at the sublexical level as well. Studies of aphasic speakers of English, German, Italian, Finnish, Japanese, and Chinese are reviewed to assess whether processing of compound words differs among speakers of languages that differ in terms of morphological structure and orthography. There is evidence from all six languages for both componential and whole-word storage of compounds, suggesting dual representation of such words in the lexicon. While the possibility of a sublexical double dissociation in aphasia is supported, data from more languages is needed to confirm that the phenomenon is present in languages with different types of compounds. A critique of the experimental methods currently used to study compounding in aphasia is provided, and directions for further research are discussed.
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