The right hemisphere involvement in the processing of morphologically derived words.

It is widely documented that the left hemisphere is dominant in all complex linguistic tasks, such as the processing of inflectional morphology. Both in Italian and in other languages, brain-damaged patients with a selective deficit in derivational morphology have never been reported. Here we present the unusual case of two patients with very similar right-hemisphere lesions, who in the absence of aphasic disorders showed a selective inability in producing derivational morphology. Although both patients were unimpaired in producing verb infinitives, they both showed a selective deficit in producing nouns only when they were derived from verbs. This difficulty was not present in deriving nouns from other grammatical categories, such as adjectives. Interestingly, both patients mostly substituted the derived noun with the past participle of the verb. This pattern of results documents for the first time a right hemisphere contribution in the domain of derivational morphology.

Publication type: 
Articolo
Author or Creator: 
Marangolo
P.
Incoccia
C.
Sabatini
U.
Castriota-Scanderbeg
A.
Pizzamiglio
L.
Burani
Publisher: 
Published by the MIT Press with the Cognitive Neuroscience Institute,, Cambridge, Mass. , Stati Uniti d'America
Source: 
Journal of cognitive neuroscience 15 (2003): 364–371.
info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Marangolo, P., Incoccia, C., Sabatini, U., Castriota-Scanderbeg, A., Pizzamiglio, L., & Burani, C./titolo:The right hemisphere involvement in the processing of morphologically derived words./doi:/rivista:Journal of cognitive neu
Date: 
2003
Resource Identifier: 
http://www.cnr.it/prodotto/i/46667