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1
Discourse production in aphasia : a current review of theoretical and methodological challenges
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2
The Differential effects of direct and indirect speech on discourse comprehension in Dutch and English listeners with and without aphasia
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3
Can tDCS enhance item-specific effects and generalization after linguistically motivated aphasia therapy for verbs?
de Aguiar, Vânia; Bastiaanse, Roelien; Capasso, Rita. - : Frontiers Research Foundation, 2015
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4
Finite verb inflections for evidential categories and source identification in Turkish agrammatic Broca's aphasia
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5
Conditional and future tense impairment in non-fluent aphasia
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6
The Effects of direct and indirect speech on discourse comprehension in Dutch listeners with and without aphasia
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7
Time reference decoupled from tense in agrammatic and fluent aphasia
Bos, Laura S; Bastiaanse, Roelien. - : Psychology Press, 2014
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8
Perceived liveliness and speech comprehensibility in aphasia : the effects of direct speech in auditory narratives
Groenewold, Rimke; Bastiaanse, Roelien; Nickels, Lyndsey. - : Wiley-Blackwell Publishing, 2014
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9
Losing track of time? Processing of time reference inflection in agrammatic and healthy speakers of German
Abstract: Background: Individuals with agrammatic aphasia (IWAs) have problems with grammatical decoding of tense inflection. However, these difficulties depend on the time frame that the tense refers to. Verb morphology with reference to the past is more difficult than with reference to the non-past, because a link needs to be made to the past event in discourse, as captured in the PAst DIscourse LInking Hypothesis (PADILIH; Bastiaanse, R., Bamyaci, E., Hsu, C., Lee, J., Yarbay Duman, T., Thompson, C. K., 2011. Time reference in agrammatic aphasia: A cross-linguistic study. J. Neurolinguist. 24, 652-673). With respect to reference to the (non-discourse-linked) future, data so far indicate that IWAs experience less difficulties as compared to past time reference (Bastiaanse, R., Bamyaci, E., Hsu, C., Lee, J., Yarbay Duman, T., Thompson, C. K., 2011. Time reference in agrammatic aphasia: A cross-linguistic study. J. Neurolinguist. 24, 652-673), supporting the assumptions of the PADILIH. Previous online studies of time reference in aphasia used methods such as reaction times analysis (e.g., Faroqi-Shah, Y., Dickey, M. W., 2009. On-line processing of tense and temporality in agrammatic aphasia. Brain Lang. 108, 97-111). So far, no such study used eye-tracking, even though this technique can bring additional insights (Burchert, F., Hanne, S., Vasishth, S., 2013. Sentence comprehension disorders in aphasia: the concept of chance performance revisited. Aphasiology 27, 112-125, doi:10.1080/02687038.2012.730603). Aims: This study investigated (1) whether processing of future and past time reference inflection differs between non-brain-damaged individuals (NBDs) and IWAs, and (2) underlying mechanisms of time reference comprehension failure by IWAs. Methods and procedures: A visual-world experiment combining sentence-picture matching and eye-tracking was administered to 12 NBDs and 6 IWAs, all native speakers of German. Participants heard German sentences with periphrastic future ('will+V') or periphrastic past ('has+V-d') verb forms while they were presented with corresponding pictures on a computer screen. Results and discussion: NBDs scored at ceiling and significantly higher than the IWAs. IWAs had below-ceiling performance on the future condition, and both participant groups were faster to respond to the past than to the future condition. These differences are attributed to a pre-existing preference to look at a past picture, which has to be overcome. Eye movement patterns suggest that both groups interpret future time reference similarly, while IWAs show a delay relative to NBDs in interpreting past time reference inflection. The eye tracking results support the PADILIH, because processing reference to the past in discourse syntax requires additional resources and thus, is problematic and delayed for people with aphasia. ; 11 page(s)
Keyword: Agrammatism; Aphasia; Discourse linking; Eye-tracking; Morphology; Spoken language comprehension; Time reference; Visual-world paradigm
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/324737
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10
Aspects of time: time reference and aspect production in Russian aphasic speakers
In: Journal of neurolinguistics. - Orlando, Fla. : Elsevier 26 (2013) 1, 113-128
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11
Production and comprehension of reference of time in Swahili-English bilingual agrammatic speakers
In: Aphasiology. - London [u.a.] : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 27 (2013) 2, 157-177
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12
Neuroimaging in aphasia treatment research: Standards for establishing the effects of treatment
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13
Characteristics of Swahili-English bilingual agrammatic spontaneous speech and the consequences for understanding agrammatic aphasia
In: Journal of neurolinguistics. - Orlando, Fla. : Elsevier 25 (2012) 4, 276-293
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14
Music in the treatment of neurological language and speech disorders: a systematic review
In: Aphasiology. - London [u.a.] : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 26 (2012) 1, 1-19
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15
Processing of audiovisual stimuli in aphasic and non-brain-damaged listeners
In: Aphasiology. - London [u.a.] : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 26 (2012) 1, 83-102
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16
Characterising agrammatism in Standard Indonesian
In: Aphasiology. - London [u.a.] : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 26 (2012) 6, 757-784
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17
Tense morphology in German agrammatism : the production of regular, irregular and mixed verbs
In: The mental lexicon. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : John Benjamins Publishing Company 7 (2012) 3, 351-380
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18
The retrieval and inflection of verbs in the spontaneous speech of fluent aphasic speakers
In: Journal of neurolinguistics. - Orlando, Fla. : Elsevier 24 (2011) 2, 163-172
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19
Time reference in agrammatic aphasia: a cross-linguistic study
In: Journal of neurolinguistics. - Orlando, Fla. : Elsevier 24 (2011) 6, 652-673
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20
Verbs and time reference in Standard Indonesian agrammatic speech
In: Aphasiology. - London [u.a.] : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 25 (2011) 12, 1562-1578
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