期刊文献+

基底神经节和规则支配性语言在血管性和变性疾病中的作用 被引量:1

The basal ganglia and rule-governed language use:Evidence from vascular and degenerative conditions
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摘要 The Declarative/Procedural Model of Pinker, Ullman and colleagues claims that the basal ganglia are part of a fronto-striatal procedural memory system which applies grammatical rules to combine morphemes (the smallest meaningful units in language) into complex words (e.g. talk-ed, talk-ing). We tested this claim b y investigating whether striatal damage or loss of its dopaminergic innervation is reliably associated with selective regular past tense deficits in patients wi th subcortical cerebrovascular damage, Parkinson’s disease or Huntington’s dis ease.We focused on past tense morphology since this allows us to contrast the re gular past tense (jump-jumped), which is rulebased,with the irregular past tens e (sleep-slept), which is not We used elicitation and priming tasks to test pat ients’ability to comprehend and produce inflected forms. We found no evidence o f a consistent association between striatal dysfunction and selective impairment of regular past tensemorphology, suggesting that the basal ganglia are not esse ntial for processing the regular past tense as a sequence of morphemes, either i n comprehension or production, in contrast to the claims of the Declarative/Proc edural Model. All patient groups showed normal activation of semantic and morpho logical representations in comprehension, despite difficulties suppressing seman tically appropriate alternatives when trying to inflect novel verbs. This is con sistent with previous reports that striatal dysfunction spares automatic activat ion of linguistic information, but disrupts later language processes that requir e inhibition of competing alternatives. The Declarative/Procedural Model of Pinker, Ullman and colleagues claims that the basal ganglia are part of a fronto-striatal procedural memory system which applies grammatical rules to combine morphemes (the smallest meaningful units in language) into complex words (e.g. talk-ed, talk-ing). We tested this claim b y investigating whether striatal damage or loss of its dopaminergic innervation is reliably associated with selective regular past tense deficits in patients wi th subcortical cerebrovascular damage, Parkinson's disease or Huntington's dis ease.We focused on past tense morphology since this allows us to contrast the re gular past tense (jump-jumped), which is rulebased,with the irregular past tens e (sleep-slept), which is not We used elicitation and priming tasks to test pat ients'ability to comprehend and produce inflected forms. We found no evidence o f a consistent association between striatal dysfunction and selective impairment of regular past tensemorphology, suggesting that the basal ganglia are not esse ntial for processing the regular past tense as a sequence of morphemes, either i n comprehension or production, in contrast to the claims of the Declarative/Proc edural Model. All patient groups showed normal activation of semantic and morpho logical representations in comprehension, despite difficulties suppressing seman tically appropriate alternatives when trying to inflect novel verbs. This is con sistent with previous reports that striatal dysfunction spares automatic activat ion of linguistic information, but disrupts later language processes that requir e inhibition of competing alternatives.
出处 《世界核心医学期刊文摘(神经病学分册)》 2005年第8期12-13,共2页 Digest of the World Core Medical Journals:Clinical Neurology
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