Radical autonomy of syntax: Evidence from transcortical sensory aphasia
- 1 November 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Aphasiology
- Vol. 9 (6) , 577-602
- https://doi.org/10.1080/02687039508248716
Abstract
The syndrome of transcortical sensory aphasia provides evidence for modular theories of grammar. The ‘corrective repetitions’ of patients clearly show their preserved competence in the area of core syntax. In this study a detailed discussion of a patient is presented, whose corrective behaviour points to his sensitivity to syntactically autonomous, obligatory dependency relations that typically occur with antecendent-governed agreement relations. This isolated ability contrasts sharply with his complete failure at corrective repetition of lexical-semantic and certain distributional cues.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Linguistic modularity? A case study of a ‘Savant’ linguistLingua, 1991
- Language cortexAphasiology, 1991
- Sensitivity to Syntactic Violations Across the Age-Span: Evidence from a Word-Monitoring TaskClinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 1991
- Domains and DynastiesPublished by Walter de Gruyter GmbH ,1987
- Verb Second Phenomena in Germanic LanguagesPublished by Walter de Gruyter GmbH ,1986
- GERMAN WORD FORMATION AND APHASIAThe Linguistic Review, 1986
- The Modularity of MindPublished by MIT Press ,1983
- Repetition in the transcortical aphasiasBrain and Language, 1978
- The syndrome of Gogi (word‐meaning) aphasiaNeurology, 1975
- Isolation of the speech areaNeuropsychologia, 1968