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Dissociation of algorithmic and heuristic processes in language comprehension: Evidence from aphasia
Authors:Alfonso Caramazza  Edgar B. Zurif
Affiliation:Johns Hopkins University USA;Boston University School of Medicine and Boston Veterans Administration Hospital USA
Abstract:Three groups of aphasic patients, Broca's, Conduction, and Wernicke's, and a nonaphasic patients control group were tested for comprehension of object-relative center-embedded sentences. The sentences were of three types: sentences in which semantic constraints between words allowed the subjects to assign a correct semantic reading of the sentence without decoding the syntax, sentences in which semantic constraints were relaxed and for which a correct reading was only possible with knowledge of syntactic relationships among words, and sentences which described highly improbable events. The subjects' task was to choose which of two pictures captured the meaning expressed in the sentence. Broca's and Conduction aphasics performed near perfectly on sentences where they could use semantic information. Their performance dropped to chance when they had to use syntactic information. These results support a neuropsychological dissociation of heuristic and algorithmic processes based primarily, though not exclusively, on semantic and syntactic information, respectively.
Keywords:Reprint requests may be addressed to Alfonso Caramazza   Department of Psychology   The Johns Hopkins University   Baltimore   Maryland 21218.
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