2014
DOI: 10.1080/02687038.2014.958915
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Non-fluent aphasia in Ibero-Romance: a review of morphosyntactic deficits

Abstract: Background: Castilian-Spanish, Catalan, Galician, and European Portuguese are the most widely spoken languages of the Ibero-Romance group. An increasing number of authors have addressed the impact of aphasia on the morphosyntax of these varieties. However, accurate linguistic characterisations are scarce and the different sources of data have not been yet compiled. Aims: To stimulate state-of-the-art research, we provided a comprehensive summary of morphosyntactic aspects of Ibero-Romance and a review of how t… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 63 publications
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“…Other studies accounting for production and grammaticality judgment in different groups of Catalan and Castilian Spanish speaking individuals with non-fluent aphasias also support the consistent dissociation between reflexives and object clitics, with the latter shown to be consistently more severely damaged (Baauw & Cuetos, 2003;Gavarró, 2008;Martínez-Ferreiro, 2010;Sanchez-Alonso, Martínez-Ferreiro & Bastiaanse, 2011). The outcomes of these studies have been summarised in Table 1, adapted from Martínez-Ferreiro et al (2015).…”
Section: Beyond the Sentence Boundarymentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Other studies accounting for production and grammaticality judgment in different groups of Catalan and Castilian Spanish speaking individuals with non-fluent aphasias also support the consistent dissociation between reflexives and object clitics, with the latter shown to be consistently more severely damaged (Baauw & Cuetos, 2003;Gavarró, 2008;Martínez-Ferreiro, 2010;Sanchez-Alonso, Martínez-Ferreiro & Bastiaanse, 2011). The outcomes of these studies have been summarised in Table 1, adapted from Martínez-Ferreiro et al (2015).…”
Section: Beyond the Sentence Boundarymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Deficits in tense (vs. agreement) have been commonly attested in the performance of Catalan and Castilian Spanish individuals with non-fluent aphasias (for recent review, see Martínez-Ferreiro, de Aguiar & Rofes, 2015). However, not many studies provide further details as for the distinction across time frames.…”
Section: Clitic Pronouns and Time Referencementioning
confidence: 99%