Michaela Nerantzini
University of Ioannina
25 Papers
59 Citations
Michaela Nerantzini is an academic researcher from University of Ioannina. The author has contributed to research in topics: Aphasia & Agrammatism. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 23 publications. Previous affiliations of Michaela Nerantzini include Northwestern University & National and Kapodistrian University of Athens.
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Papers
A Cross-Linguistic Study of the Acquisition of Clitic and Pronoun Production
Spyridoula Varlokosta,Adriana Belletti,João Costa,Naama Friedmann,Anna Gavarró,Kleanthes K. Grohmann,Maria Teresa Guasti,Laurice Tuller,Maria Lobo,Darinka Anđelković,Núria Argemí,Larisa Avram,Sanne Berends,Valentina Brunetto,Hélène Delage,Maria-José Ezeizabarrena,Iris Fattal,Ewa Haman,Angeliek van Hout,Kristine M. Jensen de López,Napoleon Katsos,Lana Kologranic,Nadezda Krstić,Jelena Kuvač Kraljević,Aneta Miękisz,Michaela Nerantzini,Clara Queraltó,Zeljana Radic,Sílvia Ruiz,Uli Sauerland,Anca Sevcenco,Magdalena Smoczyńska,Eleni Theodorou,Heather K. J. van der Lely,Alma Veenstra,John Weston,Maya Yachini,Kazuko Yatsushiro +37 more
TL;DR: It is legitimate to conclude from the data that a child who at age 5 is not able to produce any or few pronominals is a child at risk for language impairment, provided that one takes into account certain cross-linguistic differences discussed in the article.
Recovery of Sentence Production Processes Following Language Treatment in Aphasia: Evidence from Eyetracking.
TL;DR: Eyetracking findings indicate that treatment improves sentence production and results in the emergence of normal-like cognitive processes associated with successful sentence production, including structural planning.
Wh-questions and relative clauses in Greek agrammatism: Evidence from comprehension and production
TL;DR: The authors investigated the role of three linguistic factors (syntactic function, referentiali...) in the production and comprehension of wh-questions and relative clauses in Greek agrammatism, leaving open the question of which linguistic factors affect the agrammatic performance.
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Minimality effects in agrammatic comprehension : The role of lexical restriction and feature impoverishment
Spyridoula Varlokosta,Michaela Nerantzini,Despina Papadopoulou,Roelien Bastiaanse,Alan Beretta +4 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated whether the predictions within this version of Relativized Minimality can be confirmed by the data obtained from six Greek-speaking agrammatic individuals and concluded that morphology does not provide cues that can resolve minimality effects in language breakdown.
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Time reference and tense marking in Greek agrammatism: evidence from narratives and a sentence production priming task
TL;DR: In this article, cross-linguistic studies on time reference in highly inflected languages have shown that tense inflection is particularly vulnerable in agrammatic speakers, and that it is especially vulnerable to agrammatical speakers.
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