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Articles

Proper noun anomia in conversation: A description of how a man with chronic anomia constructed referencing turns

Pages 1-19 | Received 02 Nov 2011, Accepted 28 Feb 2012, Published online: 15 May 2012
 

Abstract

Background: Proper noun anomia has received significant attention as a source of evidence for the organisation of the lexicon, and the neuroanatomical bases of language. There is also some evidence that people with aphasia and related disorders may have particular difficulty producing proper nouns. However, very few studies have examined how proper noun anomia manifests in everyday conversation.

Aims: This study uses conversation analysis (CA) to describe how a man with chronic anomia constructed turns that referred to people, places, and other entities that can be named with proper nouns.

Methods & Procedures: A man with chronic anomia following a closed head injury (Paul) was recorded during everyday conversations involving two friends and the researcher. Approximately 2½ hours of recordings were collected and transcribed. A collection of referencing turns was assembled from this dataset and analysed.

Outcomes & Results: Two design features of Paul's referencing turns are identified and described. First, Paul recurrently delayed the production of reference forms in referencing turns. It is speculated that these practices generated extra time for Paul to produce proper nouns. Second, Paul recurrently utilised common noun phrases (e.g., that young bloke) as reference forms in place of proper nouns. These references were easier to produce than proper nouns, and solicited proper nouns from his conversation partners. Securing the involvement of conversation partners allowed Paul to partially distribute the productive and moral responsibility for proper noun generation.

Conclusions: It is argued that these turn construction practices represent adaptations to proper noun anomia in conversation. These findings may contribute to the development of interaction-focused interventions targeting referencing by people with anomia. Future investigation should focus on how the referencing turns of people with anomia change over time.

Notes

1Another is ageing. See, for example, Evrard (Citation2002).

2“Preference” is used technically here. It concerns how interactants choose between alternative practices, and how they show which kind of practice they are selecting. Practices that are “preferred” promote the smooth progression of the activities being undertaken; practices that are “dispreferred” tend to disrupt and expand them. Thus dispreferred practices are often more “marked” than preferred ones. See Schegloff (Citation2007, pp. 58–96) for an introduction.

3All names used in this paper are pseudonyms. Potentially identifying information in transcript extracts has also been altered.

4Note Paul's production of the proper noun “Russia” at line 32 (also see Extract 3). On the evidence available in the conversational data collected, it seems that Paul had more significant difficulty producing proper nouns associated with people's names, rather than places or entities, although these proper nouns were also problematic on some occasions.

5As Francis et al. (Citation2002) found, therapy targeting production of phenomena like common noun phrases may also improve the mechanisms involved with word retrieval. While they focused on the utility of “circumlocution” for improving impairment, the present study focuses on the potential utility of common noun phrase references as a compensatory strategy.

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