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Language deficits in pre-symptomatic Huntington's disease: evidence from Hungarian
Authors:Nemeth Dezso  Dye Cristina D  Sefcsik Tamás  Janacsek Karolina  Turi Zsolt  Londe Zsuzsa  Klivenyi Péter  Kincses Zsigmond Tamás  Szabó Nikoletta  Vecsei László  Ullman Michael T
Affiliation:a Institute of Psychology, University of Szeged, Szeged, Hungary
b Centre for Research in Linguistics and Language Sciences, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom
c American Language Institute, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, USA
d Department of Neurology, Albert Szent-Györgyi Clinical Center, University of Szeged, Szeged, Hungary
e Brain and Language Lab, Department of Neuroscience, Georgetown University, Washington, DC, USA
f International Clinical Research Center, St. Anne’s University Hospital Brno, Brno, Czech Republic
g Neuroscience Research Group of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, Hungary
Abstract:A limited number of studies have investigated language in Huntington’s disease (HD). These have generally reported abnormalities in rule-governed (grammatical) aspects of language, in both syntax and morphology. Several studies of verbal inflectional morphology in English and French have reported evidence of over-active rule processing, such as over-suffixation errors (e.g., walkeded) and over-regularizations (e.g., digged). Here we extend the investigation to noun inflection in Hungarian, a Finno-Ugric agglutinative language with complex morphology, and to genetically proven pre-symptomatic Huntington’s disease (pre-HD). Although individuals with pre-HD have no clinical, motor or cognitive symptoms, the underlying pathology may already have begun, and thus sensitive behavioral measures might reveal already-present impairments. Indeed, in a Hungarian morphology production task, pre-HD patients made both over-suffixation and over-regularization errors. The findings suggest the generality of over-active rule processing in both HD and pre-HD, across languages from different families with different morphological systems, and for both verbal and noun inflection. Because the neuropathology in pre-HD appears to be largely restricted to the caudate nucleus and related structures, the findings further implicate these structures in language, and in rule-processing in particular. Finally, the need for effective treatments in HD, which will likely depend in part on the ability to sensitively measure early changes in the disease, suggests the possibility that inflectional morphology, and perhaps other language measures, may provide useful diagnostic, tracking, and therapeutic tools for assessing and treating early degeneration in pre-HD and HD.
Keywords:Pre-symptomatic Huntington&rsquo  s disease   Basal ganglia   Caudate nucleus   Language production   Regular and irregular morphology   Hungarian
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