Changes in Agrammatic Conversational Speech over a 20 Year Period – From Single Word Turns to Grammatical Constructions

Authors

  • Anu Klippi University of Helsinki
  • Marja-Liisa Helasvuo University of Turku

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jircd.v2i1.29

Keywords:

Broca’s aphasia, agrammatism, grammatical constructions, verbs, conversation, narrative-in-interaction, recovery

Abstract

Surprisingly little is known about long-term changes, adaptation and recovery in aphasia. The objective of the study was to examine the changes in the picture of agrammatism over a 20 years period post stroke. The subject of this study was a male person JS with Broca’s aphasia. During the follow-up, we investigated the development of lexicon and grammatical constructions in conversation, especially in story telling. In addition, JS was assessed with the WAB four times during the follow-up. The conversational data were collected from informal conversations. The sample of 200 consecutive words was extracted from the beginning of the each conversation sample to compare the possible changes in the proportion and use of word classes. JS’s WAB scores showed only minor changes during the follow-up period but the percentage of verbs used grew from 8% to 19%. JS had been clearly able to develop his conversational and story-telling skills.

Author Biographies

  • Anu Klippi, University of Helsinki

    Anu Klippi is a professor of logopedics at the University of Helsinki, Finland. She received her Ph.D. from the University of Helsinki in 1996. Her main research interest is the study of impaired interaction and conversation from the viewpoint of speech and language therapy. She has studied how verbally impaired people communicate and interact in conversation. Her research focuses on multimodality and on multisemiotic systems in conversation, inter alia the interaction between speech and other semiotic systems such as nonverbal behavior. In addition, she is interested in repair sequences or sequences where meanings are being negotiated and in the potential of the conversational partner to facilitate impaired conversation.

  • Marja-Liisa Helasvuo, University of Turku

    Marja-Liisa Helasvuo is a professor of Finnish language at the University of Turku, Finland. She received her Ph.D. from UC Santa Barbara in 1997. Her research focuses on the relationship between grammar and interaction which she has studied from different perspectives, such as cross-linguistic comparison and language acquisition. She has studied grammatical features in the language of aphasic persons in interaction, with a special focus on the interactional resources speakers deploy to compensate for their linguistic problems. She participates in an international research project concerning subject expression and ellipsis in discourse in different languages.

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Published

2011-07-29

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Klippi, A., & Helasvuo, M.-L. (2011). Changes in Agrammatic Conversational Speech over a 20 Year Period – From Single Word Turns to Grammatical Constructions. Journal of Interactional Research in Communication Disorders, 2(1), 29-59. https://doi.org/10.1558/jircd.v2i1.29