Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
912083 | Journal of Neurolinguistics | 2008 | 25 Pages |
Abstract
Problematic trace-antecedent relations between deep and surface structure have been a dominant theme in sentence comprehension in agrammatism. We challenge this view and propose that the comprehension in agrammatism in declarative sentences and wh-questions stems from impaired processing in logical form. We present new data from wh-questions and declarative sentences and advance a new hypothesis which we call the set partition hypothesis. We argue that elements that signal set partition operations influence sentence comprehension while trace-antecedent relations remain intact.
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Authors
Christos Salis, Susan Edwards,