• Title of article

    Dissociation of Inflectional and Derivational Morphology in Persian: Evidence From Aphasic Patients

  • Author/Authors

    Gheitury ، Amer Department of English - Faculty of Literature - Razi University , Dianat ، Leila Department of English - Faculty of Literature - Razi University , Tafakkori Rezaei ، Shoja Department of English - Faculty of Literature - Razi University

  • Pages
    8
  • From page
    37
  • To page
    44
  • Abstract
    Introduction: It is believed that different components of our linguistic capabilities are not impaired to the same extent in aphasic patients. Moreover theoretical issues on aphasia can be researched on patients with different languages. Thus, we aimed to study the dissociation of inflectional and derivational morphology by assessing the performance of 8 Persian bilingual aphasic patients in producing Persian derivational and inflectional words.Materials and Methods: To explore the capability of patients in using derivational and inflectional words, in addition to obtaining a brief history from all patients and an image of the impaired regions of the brain, two types of tasks, word-repetition and spontaneous speech tasks, were administered to them. The results were then statistically analyzed to see which part of their word-formation competence, derivational or inflectional processes, was impaired more seriously.Results: The results of word-repetition and spontaneous speech tests indicated that patients did better at derivational morphology. In addition, a quantitative analysis revealed a gap between scores for derivational and inflectional words, confirming the dissociation of the two types of the process as claimed by generative linguists.Conclusion: Based on the results patients had a better performance on derivational words as compared to inflectional ones confirming this linguistic theory that the two types of process take place in different sections, i.e. derivational process belongs to morphology whereas inflectional process is basically syntactic.
  • Keywords
    Dissociation , Inflectional and derivational morphology , Broca s aphasia , Generative linguistics
  • Journal title
    Journal of Modern Rehabilitation
  • Record number

    2501813