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The Effects of Scrambling on Spanish and Korean Agrammatic Interpretation: Why Linear Models Fail and Structural Models Survive
Authors:Alan Beretta   Cristina Schmitt   John Halliwell   Alan Munn   Fernando Cuetos  Sujung Kim
Affiliation:Department of Linguistics, Michigan State University, East Lansing 48824, USA. beretta@msu.edu
Abstract:Several models of comprehension deficits in agrammatic aphasia rely heavily on linear considerations in the assignment of thematic roles to structural positions (e.g., the Trace-Deletion Hypothesis, the Mapping Hypothesis, and the Argument-Linking Hypothesis). These accounts predict that constructions in languages with rules that affect syntactic structure but preserve relative linear order should be unimpaired. Other models [e.g., the Double-Dependency Hypothesis, (DDH)] do not resort to linearity but are purely structural in conception and therefore should be immune to word-order effects. We tested linear and nonlinear accounts with scrambling structures in Korean and topicalization structures in Spanish. The results are very clear. The (nonlinear) DDH is entirely compatible with the evidence, but the linear accounts are not.
Keywords:Key Words: agrammatism   Broca's aphasia   scrambling   Korean aphasia   Spanish aphasia   Double-Dependency Hypothesis   Trace-Deletion Hypothesis   Mapping Hypothesis   Argument-Linking Hypothesis
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