“…Over the last 25 years or so, there has been a steady accrual of evidence within the aphasia literature establishing the influential relationship between extra-linguistic, cognitive processes and aphasia symptoms and outcomes (Baldo, Paulraj, Curran & Dronkers, 2015; Brownsett et al, 2014; Dignam et al, 2017; Marinelli, Spaccavento, Craca, Marangolo & Angelelli, 2017; Martin & Saffran, 1999; Murray, 2012, 2017a; Murray, Holland, & Beeson, 1997a, 1997b, 1997c; Paek & Murray, 2015; Petroi, Koul & Corwin, 2014; Tompkins, Bloise, Timko & Baumgaertner, 1994; Ziegler, Kerkhoff, Cate, Artinger & Zierdt, 2001). That is, regardless of aphasia profile, difficulties across the cognitive domains of attention (e.g., Lee & Pyun, 2014; Murray, 2012; Villard & Kiran, 2015), memory (e.g., Mayer & Murray, 2012; Valilla-Rohter & Kiran, 2013; Vukovic, Vuksanovic, & Vukovic, 2008), and executive functioning (e.g., Baldo et al, 2015; Dean, Della Sala, Beschin, & Cocchini, 2017; Murray, 2017a) have been identified among individuals with aphasia, which can negatively affect their language abilities at the phonological, morphosyntactic, lexical-semantic, pragmatic, and discourse levels (Caplan, Michaud & Hufford, 2013; Dean et al, 2017; Friedman & Gvion, 2007; Meteyard, Bruce, Edmundson & Oakhill, 2015; Murray, 2000, 2012; Murray et al, 1997a, 1997c; Penn, Frankel, Watermeyer & Russell, 2010; Tompkins et al, 1994; Ziegler et al, 2001). Importantly, this line of research has afforded support to contemporary conceptualizations of not only aphasia, in which deficits in cognitive functions other than language are accredited with generating or intensifying linguistic symptoms (Hula & McNeil, 2008; Kurland, 2011; Murray & Kean, 2004), but also more broadly, the neurobiology of language, in which diffuse cortical and subcortical structures and distributed connectivity support language in concert with other functional processes and control mechanisms (Cahana-Amitay & Albert, 2015; Meyer, Cunitz, Obleser & Friederici, 2014; Tremblay & Dick, 2016; Xing, Lacey, Skipper-Kallal, Zeng, & Turkeltaub, 2017).…”