ABSTRACT
This article will outline and describe the aphasic disorder of recurrent perseveration
and will demonstrate how it interacts with the retrieval and production of spoken
words in the language of fluent aphasic patients who have sustained damage to the
left (dominant) posterior temporoparietal lobe. We will concentrate on the various
kinds of sublexical segmental perseverations (the so-called phonemic carryovers of
Santo Pietro and Rigrodsky) that most often play a role in the generation of word
blendings. We will show how perseverative blends allow the clinician to better understand
the dynamics of word and syllable production in fluent aphasia by scrutinizing the
“onset/rime” and “onset/superrime” constituents of monosyllabic and polysyllabic words,
respectively. We will demonstrate to the speech language pathologist the importance
of the trochee stress pattern and the possibility that its metrical template may constitute
a structural unit that can be perseverated.
KEYWORDS
Phonemic carryover - syllable - onset - rime - blends
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Hugh W BuckinghamPh.D.
Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Louisiana State University
Baton Rouge, LA 70803
Email: hbuck@lsu.edu