IMPAIRED GRAMMAR WITH NORMAL FLUENCY AND PHONOLOGY
- 1 October 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Brain
- Vol. 111 (5) , 1111-1137
- https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/111.5.1111
Abstract
Extensive testing of grammatical function, including assessment of spontaneous language, inflectional morphology, ability to produce grammatical structures, syntactic comprehension and grammatical judgement, was carried out in 2 patients with large dominant frontal lobe lesions, including but not confined to, the third frontal convolution. Both patients were fluent and had normal articulation and phonological production and neither was agrammatic, suggesting that even very large frontal lesions do not produce Broca's aphasia and that language cortex proper is confined to the postcentral perisylvian region. Both patients were impaired in the use of more complex syntactic structures and one, who in addition had severe generalized impairment in frontal lobe function, also had impaired judgement regarding the use and placement of functors. These data provide further support for the dissociability of syntactic and morphological aspects of grammar in aphasic patients and, together with other studies, link these functions with the frontal lobe and the postcentral perisylvian cortex, respectively. The sparing of grammatical judgement in 1 patient, despite a very extensive lesion, suggests that very large portions of the frontal lobe are involved in grammatical function. The nature of frontal lobe function in syntax appears to be congruent with the role of the frontal lobes in other aspects of behaviour.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Strategy and Impairment in Sentence Understanding by Broca's and Wernicke's AphasicsCortex, 1985
- Agrammatism: Structural Deficits and Antecedent Processing DisruptionsPublished by Elsevier ,1985
- Syntactic Processing Deficits in AphasiaCortex, 1981
- Language Function, Foot of the Third Frontal Gyrus, and Rolandic OperculumArchives of Neurology, 1981
- VERBAL FLUENCY TEST AND SITES OF FRONTAL LESIONS1981
- Localisation of Lesions in Aphasia: Clinical-CT Scan Correlations in Stroke PatientsCortex, 1979
- Broca aphasiaNeurology, 1978
- The Nature of Comprehension Errors in Broca's, Conduction and Wernicke's AphasicsCortex, 1976