Men who sustained penetrating head injuries resulting in nonfluent aphasia within six months following injury, were examined fifteen years later and classified into two groups, 13 with persistent nonfluent aphasia, and 26 without symptoms of aphasia. Relative to a normal control group on a comprehensive battery of speech and language tests, the chronic nonfluent aphasics demonstrated syntactic processing deficits in all language modalities, with only mild or no impairment in other language faculties. The recovered group demonstrated deficits only in written expressive syntax.
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