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Eye-tracking the effect of word order in sentence comprehension in aphasia: evidence from Basque, a free word order ergative language

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posted on 2017-07-06, 15:12 authored by Miren Arantzeta, Roelien Bastiaanse, Frank Burchert, Martijn Wieling, Maite Martinez-Zabaleta, Itziar Laka

Agrammatic speakers of languages with overt grammatical case show impaired use of the morphological cues to establish theta-role relations in sentences presented in non-canonical word orders. We analysed the effect of word order on the sentence comprehension of aphasic speakers of Basque, an ergative, free word order and head-final (SOV) language. Ergative languages such as Basque establish a one-to-one mapping of the thematic role and the case marker. We collected behavioural and gaze-fixation data while agrammatic speakers performed a picture-matching task with auditorily presented sentences with different word orders. We found that people with aphasia (PWA) had difficulties in assigning theta-roles in Theme-Agent order. This result is in line with processing accounts. Contrary to previous findings, our data do not suggest a systematic delay in the integration of morphological information in the PWA group, but strong reliance on the ergative case morphology and difficulties assigning thematic roles into the determiner phrases.

Funding

This research has been supported by the Erasmus Mundus Joint Doctoral Programme (EMJD) of the European Union (partnership n° 2012-0025/grant n° 2013-1458) to R. Bastiaanse and M. Arantzeta, by the European Community’s Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007–2013), FP7 Cooperation SSH grant agreement no. 613465 (AThEME), Spanish Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (FFI2012-31360) to I. Laka, and the Basque Government (IT665-13) to both I. Laka and M. Arantzeta.

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    Language Cognition and Neuroscience

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