» Articles » PMID: 24209737

Preservation of Passive Constructions in a Patient with Primary Progressive Aphasia

Overview
Journal Cortex
Date 2013 Nov 12
PMID 24209737
Citations 2
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Research into agrammatic comprehension in English has described a pattern of impaired understanding of passives and retained ability on active constructions. Some accounts of this dissociation predict that patients who are unable to comprehend actives will also be impaired in the comprehension of passives. We report the case of a man with primary progressive aphasia (PPA) (WR), whose comprehension was at chance on active sentences, but at ceiling on passives. In a series of reversible sentence comprehension tests WR displayed difficulties with active transitives and truncated actives with an auxiliary. In passive sentences, he displayed sensitivity to the agent marker by, as well as the passive morphology of the verb. This pattern of dissociation challenges current theories of agrammatic comprehension. We explore explanations based on the distinction between morphological and configurational cues, as well as on the semantic and discourse related differences between active and passive constructions.

Citing Articles

Thematic Integration Impairments in Primary Progressive Aphasia: Evidence From Eye-Tracking.

Walenski M, Mack J, Marsel Mesulam M, Thompson C Front Hum Neurosci. 2021; 14:587594.

PMID: 33488370 PMC: 7815820. DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2020.587594.


Artificial grammar learning in vascular and progressive non-fluent aphasias.

Cope T, Wilson B, Robson H, Drinkall R, Dean L, Grube M Neuropsychologia. 2017; 104:201-213.

PMID: 28843341 PMC: 5637161. DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2017.08.022.