NOUN AND VERB PRODUCTION IN UZBEK NON-FLUENT APHASIA

Authors

  • Azimova Iroda Alisherovna

Keywords:

aphasia, noun, verb, speech production

Abstract

Noun and verb retrieval in Uzbek agrammatic aphasia is studied through picture naming experiment. Healthy and brain-damaged individuals participated in the study. Neurolinguistic studies showed difference in noun and verb impairment in aphasia. Majority of studies reported that noun processing is easier than verb processing for aphasic speakers. The results of the current study showed no noun-verb dissociation in Uzbek agrammatic aphasia. However, a small effect of age of acquisition on noun production and imageability effect on verb production is observed.

References

Alyahya, R. S.W., Halai, A. D., Conroy, Р., Ralph, M. A. L. (2018) Noun and verb processing in aphasia: Behavioural profiles and neural correlates. NeuroImage: Clinical 18 (2018), 215–230.

Azimova I. (2014) O’zbek tilidagi agrammatic spontan nutqda otlarning ifodalanishi. Til va dabiyot ta’limi. 9, 30-33.

Azimova I. (2015) O’zbek tilidagi agrammatik spontan nutqda fe’llarning ifodalanishi. O’zMU xabarlari # 2, 214-218.

Azimova I., Bastiaanse R. (2014) Verbs in Uzbek agrammatic spontaneous speech. Stem-, Spraak- en Taalpathologie. Vol. 19, Supplement 1, pp. 116-119. http://rjh.ub.rug.nl/sstp/article/view/13158/10658

Bastiaanse, R. & Jonkers, R. (1998) Verb retrieval in action naming and spontaneous speech in agrammatic and anomic aphasia. Aphasiology, 12, 951-969.

Bastiaanse,R., Wieling, M. & Wolthuis, N. (2016) The role of frequency in the retrieval of nouns and verbs in aphasia, Aphasiology, 30:11, 1221-1239, DOI: 10.1080/02687038.2015.1100709

Bird, H., Howard, D., & Franklin, S. (2000). Why is a verb like an inanimate object? Grammatical category and semantic category deficits. Brain and Language, 72, 246–309.

Brysbaert, M. (2016). "Aphasia and age of acquisition: are early-learned words more resilient?". Aphasiology. 30 (11): 1240–1263.

Caramazza, A., & Hillis, A. (1991). Lexical organization of nouns and verbs in the brain. Nature, 349, 788–790.

Clark, E.V. (2009) First language acquisition. Cambridge University Press, 504.

Hart, J., Berndt, R. S., &Caramazza, A. C. (1985). Category-specific naming deficit following cerebral infarction.Nature,316, 439–440. PubMed Google Scholar.

Holmes, J. M., Marshall, J. C., & Newcombe, F. (1971). Syntactic class as a determinant of word-retrieval in normal and dyslexic subjects. Nature, 234, 418.

Rapp, B., & Caramazza, A. (1998). A case of selective difficulty in writing verbs. Neurocase, 4, 127–140.

Thompson C.K. (2003) Unaccusative verb production in agrammatic aphasia: the argument structure complexity hypothesis. Journal of Neurolinguistics, 16, 151–167.

Thompson, C. K., Lange, K. L., Schneider, S. L., & Shapiro, L. P. (1997). Agrammatic and nonbrain- damaged subjects’ verb and verb argument structure production. Aphasiology, 11, 473–490.

Westbury CF, Cribben I and Cummine J (2016) Imaging Imageability: Behavioral Effects and Neural Correlates of Its Interaction with Affect and Context. Front. Hum. Neurosci. 10:346. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2016.00346

Zingeser, L. B., & Berndt, R. S. (1990). Retrieval of nouns and verbs in agrammatism and anomia. Brain and Language, 39, 14–32.

Published

2021-10-31