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Brain and Language
Volume 60, Issue 3, December 1997, Pages 360-380
 
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doi:10.1006/brln.1997.1845    How to Cite or Link Using DOI (Opens New Window)
Copyright © 1997 Academic Press. All rights reserved.

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Levels of Morphological Deficit: Indications from Inflectional Regularity*1, , *2, , *3

William Badecker

Johns Hopkins University

Available online 19 April 2002.

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Abstract

A language impairment that affects the production of inflected and/or derived words may result from a deficit that specifically affects morphological processing mechanisms, but it might also arise from whole-word processing failures as well (Badecker & Caramazza, 1987; Funnell, 1987). However, to motivate a true morphological impairment, the deficit must be understood in terms of one or more different levels of morphological structure. Minimally, we can distinguish a word's morphosyntactic representation from its morphophonological representation. In the single-case study reported here a deficit affecting the representation or processing of morphosyntactic representations is motivated. A critical part of the argument is that the deficit affects both regular and irregular inflection, and that no whole-word processing deficit can account for the particular pattern observed in this patient.


Brain and Language
Volume 60, Issue 3, December 1997, Pages 360-380
 
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