Evaluation of the Crosslinguistic Nonword Repetition Test: Evidence From a Large and Diverse Secondary Data Set.

IF 2.2
Kamila Polišenská, Shula Chiat, Jakub Szewczyk, Stanislava Antonijevic, Elma Blom, Tessel Boerma, Ute Bohnacker, Angel Chan, Vasiliki Chondrogianni, Nga Ching Fu, Daniela Gatt, Helen Grech, Magdalena Jezek, Svetlana Kapalková, Sari Kunnari, Juliane Maier, Chantal Mayer-Crittenden, Linnéa Öberg, Salomé Schwob, Katrin Skoruppa, Nadine Tabone, Josje Verhagen, Michelle White
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Abstract

Purpose: The aim of this study was to evaluate the crosslinguistic validity of the Crosslinguistic Nonword Repetition Test (CL-NWR) based on a large multicountry sample by investigating factors related to language ability, as well as potential confounds.

Method: The data consisted of CL-NWR scores from children aged 37-165 months, collected by 18 research teams across 15 countries. Item-level analysis was employed to examine any nondesirable effects of gender, socioeconomic status, bilingual status, and the amount of exposure to the test language, as well as desirable effects of age, item length, and clinical status (children categorized as typically developing [TD], with developmental language disorder [DLD], or with reported language concerns [LC], respectively). Subsamples were used to evaluate the consistency of findings across three time points and between different versions of the CL-NWR.

Results: Bayesian analysis provided strong evidence for the effects of age, item length, and clinical status on CL-NWR performance, as well as consistency across time points. In contrast, there was weak or no evidence for the effects of gender, socioeconomic status, bilingual status, amount of exposure, or test version. Additionally, there were two interactions between (a) item length and clinical status, suggesting that children with DLD found longer nonwords disproportionately more challenging than TD children, and (b) age and clinical status, with the gap between TD and LC groups narrowing with age.

Conclusions: The CL-NWR was unaffected by environmental and demographic factors that often influence language assessments, including some nonword repetition tests. Performance was driven by factors reflecting language abilities. This makes the CL-NWR a unique and valuable tool for language assessment contributing to the identification of DLD in diverse linguistic, social, and geographical contexts.

跨语言非词重复测试的评价:来自大量不同的辅助数据集的证据。
目的:本研究旨在通过调查与语言能力相关的因素以及潜在的混淆因素,评估跨语言非词重复测试(cross - slinguistic Nonword Repetition Test, CL-NWR)的跨语言有效性。方法:数据包括来自15个国家的18个研究团队收集的37-165个月儿童的CL-NWR评分。项目水平分析用于检查性别、社会经济地位、双语地位和测试语言暴露量的不良影响,以及年龄、项目长度和临床状态(儿童分别被分类为典型发展[TD]、发展性语言障碍[DLD]或报告语言问题[LC])的不良影响。子样本用于评估三个时间点和不同版本的CL-NWR之间发现的一致性。结果:贝叶斯分析提供了强有力的证据,证明年龄、项目长度和临床状态对CL-NWR表现的影响,以及跨时间点的一致性。相比之下,性别、社会经济地位、双语地位、接触量或测试版本的影响证据很弱或没有证据。此外,(a)项目长度与临床状态之间存在交互作用,表明DLD儿童比TD儿童发现更长的非词更具挑战性,(b)年龄与临床状态之间存在交互作用,TD组与LC组之间的差距随着年龄的增长而缩小。结论:CL-NWR不受环境和人口因素的影响,这些因素通常会影响语言评估,包括一些非单词重复测试。表现是由反映语言能力的因素决定的。这使得CL-NWR成为一种独特而有价值的语言评估工具,有助于在不同的语言、社会和地理背景下识别DLD。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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