“…This definition is more encompassing than the previous distinction between direct and indirect speech acts proposed by the SPM (Searle, 1975). This distinction has proven particularly useful for studying how pragmatic performance can vary as a function of increasing inferential complexity in clinical populations, such as those with traumatic brain injury (Bosco, Parola & Sacco et al, 2017), schizophrenia (Bosco et al, 2019; Parola et al, 2018), right (Parola et al, 2016) and left (Gabbatore et al, 2014) hemisphere damage, and also for assessing the comprehension of different communicative phenomena and expressive modalities in these populations (Bosco, Gabbatore, et al, 2018; Bosco, Parola, et al, 2018; Parola, Brasso, et al, 2021; Parola et al, 2020; Parola, Gabbatore, et al, 2021). This study provides additional support for this distinction and its utility, for example, in the clinical assessment of communicative-pragmatic deficits (see Angeleri et al, 2008; Bosco, Parola et al, 2018).…”