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Brain Cogn ; 53(2): 223-8, 2003 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14607152

ABSTRACT

This study investigates three factors that have been argued to define "canonical form" in sentence comprehension: Syntactic structure, semantic role, and frequency of usage. We first examine the claim that sentences containing unaccusative verbs present difficulties analogous to those of passive sentences. Using a plausibility judgment task, we show that a mixed group of aphasics performed significantly better on unaccusatives than on passives. We then turn to the observation that passives are generally harder than actives for aphasics. We show that this effect is modulated by lexical bias, i.e., the likelihood that a verb appears in a given syntactic structure: Passives of passive-bias verbs were significantly easier than passives of active-bias verbs. More generally, sentences whose structure matches the lexical bias of the main verb are significantly easier than sentences in which structure and lexical bias do not match. These findings suggest that "canonical form" reflects frequency and lexical biases.


Subject(s)
Aphasia/diagnosis , Judgment , Linguistics , Female , Humans , Male , Random Allocation , Semantics , Severity of Illness Index , Vocabulary
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