{"title":"Regular and Irregular Inflection in Different Groups of Bilingual Children and the Role of Verbal Short-Term and Verbal Working Memory","authors":"E. Blom, E. Bosma, W. Heeringa","doi":"10.3390/LANGUAGES6010056","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Bilingual children often experience difficulties with inflectional morphology. The aim of this longitudinal study was to investigate how regularity of inflection in combination with verbal short-term and working memory (VSTM, VWM) influences bilingual children’s performance. Data from 231 typically developing five- to eight-year-old children were analyzed: Dutch monolingual children (N = 45), Frisian-Dutch bilingual children (N = 106), Turkish-Dutch bilingual children (N = 31), Tarifit-Dutch bilingual children (N = 38) and Arabic-Dutch bilingual children (N = 11). Inflection was measured with an expressive morphology task. VSTM and VWM were measured with a Forward and Backward Digit Span task, respectively. The results showed that, overall, children performed more accurately at regular than irregular forms, with the smallest gap between regulars and irregulars for monolinguals. Furthermore, this gap was smaller for older children and children who scored better on a non-verbal intelligence measure. In bilingual children, higher accuracy at using (irregular) inflection was predicted by a smaller cross-linguistic distance, a larger amount of Dutch at home, and a higher level of parental education. Finally, children with better VSTM, but not VWM, were more accurate at using regular and irregular inflection.","PeriodicalId":45337,"journal":{"name":"Langages","volume":"19 1","pages":"56"},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2021-03-17","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Langages","FirstCategoryId":"98","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3390/LANGUAGES6010056","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"文学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2
Abstract
Bilingual children often experience difficulties with inflectional morphology. The aim of this longitudinal study was to investigate how regularity of inflection in combination with verbal short-term and working memory (VSTM, VWM) influences bilingual children’s performance. Data from 231 typically developing five- to eight-year-old children were analyzed: Dutch monolingual children (N = 45), Frisian-Dutch bilingual children (N = 106), Turkish-Dutch bilingual children (N = 31), Tarifit-Dutch bilingual children (N = 38) and Arabic-Dutch bilingual children (N = 11). Inflection was measured with an expressive morphology task. VSTM and VWM were measured with a Forward and Backward Digit Span task, respectively. The results showed that, overall, children performed more accurately at regular than irregular forms, with the smallest gap between regulars and irregulars for monolinguals. Furthermore, this gap was smaller for older children and children who scored better on a non-verbal intelligence measure. In bilingual children, higher accuracy at using (irregular) inflection was predicted by a smaller cross-linguistic distance, a larger amount of Dutch at home, and a higher level of parental education. Finally, children with better VSTM, but not VWM, were more accurate at using regular and irregular inflection.
期刊介绍:
Créée en 1966 par R. Barthes, J. Dubois, A.-J. Greimas, B. Pottier, B. Quemada, N. Ruwet, la revue Langages a été dirigée scientifiquement par D. Leeman jusqu’en 2009. Langages met à la disposition d’une communauté scientifique pluridisciplinaire, sans exclusive théorique ou méthodologique, les résultats des recherches contemporaines de pointe, originales, nationales et internationales, menées dans l’ensemble des domaines couverts par les sciences du langage entendues au sens le plus large du terme, y compris dans leurs interfaces avec leurs disciplines connexes (psycholinguistique, traitement automatique du langage, didactique, traduction…). Langages accueille toutes les thématiques reflétant les préoccupations qui dominent selon les époques ou les mutations disciplinaires, ainsi que les bilans de champs linguistiques particuliers assortis de visée prospective. Langages édite chaque année 4 volumes, chacun sous la responsabilité scientifique d’un coordinateur qui sollicite les contributeurs, français ou étrangers, experts du thème traité. Les volumes proposés sont soumis à une double expertise : les propositions de numéros sont agréées par un comité scientifique international multi-disciplinaire ; les volumes dans leur état final sont expertisés par des spécialistes de la thématique abordée français et étrangers, extérieurs au comité.