Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W76094881> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 89 of
89
with 100 items per page.
- W76094881 abstract "Code switching is a practice constrained by grammatical principles and shaped by environmental, social and personal influences (Milroy and Wei 1995). There are several factors crucial to understanding of code switching like the community in which it takes place or mode of the bilingual speaker. Some communities accept code switching within a single context as the norm for communicative interactions whereas others maintain a strict distinction between the languages (Heller 1995). It is thus imperative to study code switching in a proper linguistic and cultural context. Language mode is an important factor to be considered in any study on bilingual aphasia. Language mode is the state of activation of bilingual’s languages and language processing mechanisms at a given time (Grosjean 2000). A bilingual can be on a continuum depending on the situation he is in. At one end they may be in monolingual mode where there would be ideally no mixing and at the other end they find themselves in a bilingual mode mixing languages freely (Grosjean 1982). The movement of a bilingual along the continuum results in varying language behaviors. Earlier research paid little attention to language mode but as Grosjean (2000) highlights, it needs to be controlled in any bilingual experiment by evaluating monolingual and bilingual modes on different days with different interlocutors. In the present study an attempt has been made to do so. Bilingual aphasic speakers like normal bilinguals, need to alternate and use context appropriate languages. Sometimes the deficit in linguistic competence may affect this ability to alternate the linguistic codes (Munoz, Marquardt and Copeland 1998). Bilingual aphasics have been seen to combine languages in a variety of ways. They may use several languages together in same utterance (Gloning & Gloning, 1965; Mosner & Pilsch, 1971) or produce the correct name of an object in an unsolicited language (Gloning & Gloning, 1965; Weisenburg & Mcbride, 1935;) even when it is impossible for the same patient to produce the correct name in that language upon request. Junque, Vendrell, Vendrell-Beret and Tobena (1989) and Paradis (1995) suggest that mixing of languages is frequently observed recovery pattern among bilingual aphasics. One of the earliest detailed reports on language mixing was by Perecman (1984) of a 80-year-old male who suffered extensive bilateral temporal hematomes resulting from a car accident. Data was analyzed for different levels (phonological, morphological, lexical-semantic and syntactic) of code switching. She concluded that language boundaries are poorly delineated in polyglot aphasic’s mental grammar and remarked that utterance level mixing and spontaneous translation are abnormal behaviors seen in bilingual aphasics. Grosjean (1985) contradicts these findings by specifying that utterance level mixing is not unique to bilingual aphasics as suggested by Perecman (1984). He pointed out that the interlocutor in the above study was a multilingual who mixed languages and this in turn could have triggered language mixing in subject as a communicative strategy. He identified factors such as language mode, pre morbid language use and test constraints as strategic in any study dealing with language mixing. Hyltenstam (1995) analyzed samples of language mixing from 31 cases of bilingual aphasia reported in literature using Poplack’s syntactic constraints and the MLF (matrix language frame, Myers-Scotton 1993) model. He found that it is reasonable to believe that the code switching of aphasic speakers is structured according to same conversational constraints as in normal speakers. Munoz, Marquardt and Copeland (1998) pointed to methodological shortfalls that comprised data interpretation such as little information about pre morbid language use, presence of bilingual interlocutors, limited samples and lack of controls. In order to overcome these, Munoz, Marquardt and Copeland (1998), compared the code switching patterns of aphasic and neurologically normal bilingual speakers of English and Spanish using Matrix language frame (MLF) model. Communicative difficulties resulting from code switching with" @default.
- W76094881 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W76094881 creator A5039933421 @default.
- W76094881 creator A5065222213 @default.
- W76094881 date "2003-01-01" @default.
- W76094881 modified "2023-09-26" @default.
- W76094881 title "Code Switching in Normal and Aphasic Kannada-English Bilinguals." @default.
- W76094881 cites W139284646 @default.
- W76094881 cites W1503921659 @default.
- W76094881 cites W1516682213 @default.
- W76094881 cites W158344203 @default.
- W76094881 cites W167288222 @default.
- W76094881 cites W2020412464 @default.
- W76094881 cites W2020896463 @default.
- W76094881 cites W2034232325 @default.
- W76094881 cites W2036534932 @default.
- W76094881 cites W2069730806 @default.
- W76094881 cites W2090781564 @default.
- W76094881 cites W2130466720 @default.
- W76094881 cites W2319654989 @default.
- W76094881 cites W2989666508 @default.
- W76094881 cites W2990093325 @default.
- W76094881 cites W575122873 @default.
- W76094881 cites W585076789 @default.
- W76094881 hasPublicationYear "2003" @default.
- W76094881 type Work @default.
- W76094881 sameAs 76094881 @default.
- W76094881 citedByCount "4" @default.
- W76094881 countsByYear W760948812015 @default.
- W76094881 countsByYear W760948812018 @default.
- W76094881 countsByYear W760948812019 @default.
- W76094881 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W76094881 hasAuthorship W76094881A5039933421 @default.
- W76094881 hasAuthorship W76094881A5065222213 @default.
- W76094881 hasConcept C138885662 @default.
- W76094881 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W76094881 hasConcept C166957645 @default.
- W76094881 hasConcept C17744445 @default.
- W76094881 hasConcept C180747234 @default.
- W76094881 hasConcept C18552078 @default.
- W76094881 hasConcept C191795146 @default.
- W76094881 hasConcept C199539241 @default.
- W76094881 hasConcept C2779343474 @default.
- W76094881 hasConcept C2779422653 @default.
- W76094881 hasConcept C41008148 @default.
- W76094881 hasConcept C41895202 @default.
- W76094881 hasConcept C49876356 @default.
- W76094881 hasConcept C95457728 @default.
- W76094881 hasConceptScore W76094881C138885662 @default.
- W76094881 hasConceptScore W76094881C15744967 @default.
- W76094881 hasConceptScore W76094881C166957645 @default.
- W76094881 hasConceptScore W76094881C17744445 @default.
- W76094881 hasConceptScore W76094881C180747234 @default.
- W76094881 hasConceptScore W76094881C18552078 @default.
- W76094881 hasConceptScore W76094881C191795146 @default.
- W76094881 hasConceptScore W76094881C199539241 @default.
- W76094881 hasConceptScore W76094881C2779343474 @default.
- W76094881 hasConceptScore W76094881C2779422653 @default.
- W76094881 hasConceptScore W76094881C41008148 @default.
- W76094881 hasConceptScore W76094881C41895202 @default.
- W76094881 hasConceptScore W76094881C49876356 @default.
- W76094881 hasConceptScore W76094881C95457728 @default.
- W76094881 hasLocation W760948811 @default.
- W76094881 hasOpenAccess W76094881 @default.
- W76094881 hasPrimaryLocation W760948811 @default.
- W76094881 hasRelatedWork W1529938254 @default.
- W76094881 hasRelatedWork W167288222 @default.
- W76094881 hasRelatedWork W1880752142 @default.
- W76094881 hasRelatedWork W2025970345 @default.
- W76094881 hasRelatedWork W2075854860 @default.
- W76094881 hasRelatedWork W2109696853 @default.
- W76094881 hasRelatedWork W2110156079 @default.
- W76094881 hasRelatedWork W2111561603 @default.
- W76094881 hasRelatedWork W2113934248 @default.
- W76094881 hasRelatedWork W2117934601 @default.
- W76094881 hasRelatedWork W2142114468 @default.
- W76094881 hasRelatedWork W2148282681 @default.
- W76094881 hasRelatedWork W2151442289 @default.
- W76094881 hasRelatedWork W2171260838 @default.
- W76094881 hasRelatedWork W2199124631 @default.
- W76094881 hasRelatedWork W2479305364 @default.
- W76094881 hasRelatedWork W2955094614 @default.
- W76094881 hasRelatedWork W2973992112 @default.
- W76094881 hasRelatedWork W2976166394 @default.
- W76094881 hasRelatedWork W2990537117 @default.
- W76094881 isParatext "false" @default.
- W76094881 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W76094881 magId "76094881" @default.
- W76094881 workType "article" @default.