Language disorders secondary to focal brain damage can cause a variety of disruptions to the ability of aphasic speakers to understand and produce sentences. This project investigates the functional bases of sentence processing disorders from the perspective of what is known about normal language processing. Primary focus is on the role of the verb in sentence comprehension and production, on the assumption that impairments that selectively affect verb representation or processing in aphasia will have important effects on sentence processing. Emerging functional neuroimaging methods, which can identify distinct patterns of neural activation associated with different language tasks, are also used to test hypotheses about the independence and interrelationships among language processing components. In the next project period, five experiments will investigate the important question of whether noun/verb distinctions found among aphasic speakers and in previous neuroimaging studies reflect semantic or syntactic differences between words. A related issue to be studied in the same experiments is the extent to which grammatical class ambiguity affects word processing. Two experiments will investigate effects of syntactic and semantic factors in aphasic sentence comprehension. The word-monitoring paradigm will be used to determine the sensitivity of patients to 1) the different syntactic consequences of some semantically related verbs, and 2) to the semantic relationships between verbs and the nouns that are potential fillers of their thematic roles. Two additional experiments based on the same set of theoretical issues that underlie the monitoring experiments will be conducted to elicit sentences with specific structures. Two experiments using functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) with normal subjects during sentence processing will seek to distinguish brain activation patterns that may be attributable to syntactic or semantic processes. These studies differ from much previous work on this issue in that they employ relatively simple sentences or phrases, and they focus subjects? attention on sentence interpretation, rather than on their well-formedness. The results of these experiments are expected to contribute to our understanding of how the language system is organized, which is necessary before we can understand the basis of aphasic symptoms and how their remediation might be approached.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
2R01DC000262-17
Application #
6383270
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-BBBP-3 (01))
Program Officer
Cooper, Judith
Project Start
1983-12-01
Project End
2006-12-31
Budget Start
2002-01-25
Budget End
2002-12-31
Support Year
17
Fiscal Year
2002
Total Cost
$337,838
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Maryland Baltimore
Department
Neurology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
003255213
City
Baltimore
State
MD
Country
United States
Zip Code
21201
Burton, Martha W; Krebs-Noble, Donna; Gullapalli, Rao P et al. (2009) Functional neuroimaging of grammatical class: ambiguous and unambiguous nouns and verbs. Cogn Neuropsychol 26:148-71
Berndt, R S; Mitchum, C C; Haendiges, A N et al. (1997) Verb retrieval in aphasia. 1. Characterizing single word impairments. Brain Lang 56:68-106
Berndt, R S; Mitchum, C C (1997) Lexical-semantic organization: evidence from aphasia. Clin Neurosci 4:57-63
Berndt, R S; Haendiges, A N; Wozniak, M A (1997) Verb retrieval and sentence processing: dissociation of an established symptom association. Cortex 33:99-114
Berndt, R S; Haendiges, A N; Mitchum, C C et al. (1997) Verb retrieval in aphasia. 2. Relationship to sentence processing. Brain Lang 56:107-37
Berndt, R S; Mitchum, C C; Wayland, S (1997) Patterns of sentence comprehension in aphasia: a consideration of three hypotheses. Brain Lang 60:197-221
Haendiges, A N; Berndt, R S; Mitchum, C C (1996) Assessing the elements contributing to a ""mapping"" deficit: a targeted treatment study. Brain Lang 52:276-302
Berndt, R S; Mitchum, C C; Haendiges, A N (1996) Comprehension of reversible sentences in ""agrammatism"": a meta-analysis. Cognition 58:289-308
Berndt, R S; Zingeser, L B (1991) Grammatical class effects in word production: finding the locus of the deficit. Brain Lang 41:597-600