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2009 | 45 | 2 | 245-260

Article title

Idiom Processing in Aphasic Patients

Authors

Selected contents from this journal

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
The aim of the present paper is to provide insight into the issue of idiom comprehension in patients who are in the process of recovery from the syndrome of aphasia. Research in figurative language comprehension has seen a robust development in the recent decades. However, it has not been until quite recently that psycholinguists began to delve into the aspect of metaphorical language comprehension in brain damaged populations. It was observed that even though the ability to produce and understand language is recovered in the majority of patients with head trauma, the impairment of some aspects of comprehension may protract. The understanding of idioms, metaphors, similes and proverbs, due to their specific, non-literal character, has been evidenced to pose a serious problem to aphasic patients, as they fail to decipher the figurative meaning of the utterance, and, instead, tend to process the message literally (Papagno et al. 2004). In the present study, three patients who suffered from aphasic disorder were tested for comprehension of idioms by means of two multiple choice tasks. The obtained results corroborated the hypothesis that patients who are in the process of recovery from aphasia encounter various pitfalls in the comprehension of idiomatic language. Predominantly, they exhibit an inclination to choose the erroneous, literal paraphrases of the presented idioms over their correct, idiomatic counterparts. The present paper aims at accounting for the reasons underlying such a tendency.

Publisher

Year

Volume

45

Issue

2

Pages

245-260

Physical description

Dates

published
2009-06-01
online
2009-06-25

Contributors

  • Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań

References

  • Cacciari C., F. Reati, M.R. Colombo, R. Padovani, S. Rizzo and C. Papagno. 2006. "The comprehension of ambiguous idioms in aphasic patients". Neuropsychologia 44: 1305-1314.[PubMed]
  • Cacciari, C. and M.C. Levorato. 1998. "The effect of semantic analyzability of idioms in metalinguistic tasks". Metaphor and Symbol 13(3). 159-177.[Crossref]
  • Fabbro, F. 1999. The neurolinguistics of bilingualism. Hove: Psychology Press.
  • Giora, R. and O. Fein. 1999. "On understanding familiar and less-familiar figurative language". Journal of Pragmatics 31(12). 1601-1618.[Crossref]
  • Giora, R. 2002. "Literal vs. figurative language: Different or equal?" Journal of Pragmatics 34(4). 487-506.[Crossref]
  • Giora, R. 2007. "Is metaphor special? Editorial". Brain and Language 100. 111-114.[WoS]
  • Papagno, C. and A. Caporali. 2007. "Testing idiom comprehension in aphasic patients: The effects of task and idiom type". Brain and Language 100. 208-220.[WoS]
  • Papagno, C. and A. Genoni. 2003. "The role of syntactic processing in idiom comprehension". Brain and Language 87. 73-74.
  • Papagno, C., P. Tabossi, M.R. Colombo and P. Zampetti. 2004. "Idiom comprehension in aphasic patients". Brain and Language 89. 226-234.[WoS]
  • Stuss, D., G. Eskes and J. Foster. 1994. "Experimental neuropsychological studies of frontal lobe functions". In: Boller, F. and H. Spinnler (eds.), Handbook of neuropsychology (vol. 9). Amsterdam: Elsevier. 149-185.

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.doi-10_2478_v10010-009-0014-6
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