双语发展研究中的神经多样性:通过公平、多样性和包容性视角的最新见解

IF 2.1 3区 医学 Q2 AUDIOLOGY & SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY
Kai Ian Leung, Monika Molnar
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引用次数: 0

摘要

对典型发展儿童的研究表明,在评估双语儿童的能力时存在各种偏见。这些偏见可能导致对语言和认知能力的不公平评估——可能高估或低估双语者的技能。最近关于神经发散性双语儿童的评论暗示了这些偏见在临床研究中也存在的可能性。本文从公平、多样性和包容性的角度对儿童双语神经多样性研究进行了综述。具体来说,它评估了最近研究中潜在的偏见,以确定语言和认知能力是否得到了公平的评估,确定了研究中所代表的语言和神经多样性经验的类型,并检查了双语个体在研究中扮演的角色。方法通过多管齐下的数据库检索和人工检索,对双语神经分化儿童语言和认知能力的定量研究进行了简短的系统综述。乔安娜布里格斯研究所的检查表被用于偏见风险评估。从95项研究中提取数据并进行分析,包括研究方法、与双语相关的信息(如习得年龄、语言历史工具、社会经济地位)、感兴趣的结果(语言、认知)、任务(如领域、名称)以及每篇文章的主要结果或结论。我们发现,语言和认知的公平双语评估受到缺乏文化和语言上适当工具的严重影响。大多数研究采用病例对照设计,将神经发散性双语者与单语者或正常发展的同龄人进行对比,这促进了双语神经多样性研究中以缺陷为基础的单语中心观点。我们还发现了定义和衡量双语能力的持续挑战,这使得跨研究和条件的交叉比较复杂化。研究重点主要集中在发展性语言障碍(DLD;n = 34)和自闭症谱系障碍(ASD;N = 29)考虑到他们的语言症状,而获得性障碍尚未得到充分研究。此外,缺乏以社区为基础的研究,通过在整个研究过程中纳入双语社区来提供更具包容性的方法。结论本综述强调需要采用公平和包容的研究实践来更好地理解和支持神经发散性双语儿童。未来的研究应该包括对双语和神经多样性的细致理解,优先考虑包容性方法以及使用文化和语言上适当的工具进行整体评估,以避免误诊并确保语言和认知的公平临床评估。先前的研究表明,神经典型的双语儿童经常被与单语标准儿童进行比较,这可能会引入偏见并导致双语能力的错误描述。单语规范的评估对双语儿童来说是不公平的。这篇综述考察了最近关于神经发散型双语儿童的研究中的偏见,重点关注认知和语言能力的评估,这些技能也经常被临床医生评估,包括言语语言病理学家。这项工作的潜在或实际临床意义是什么?这篇综述整合了一个结构化的EDI框架,为临床医生和研究人员提供神经多样性研究的背景。报告强调需要对所有双语儿童实施全面和文化上适当的评估方法,从而实现更公平的评估,并有助于更好地支持有针对性的干预措施和包容性的临床和研究实践。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Examining Neurodiversity in Bilingual Development Research: Recent Insights Through an Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion Lens

Examining Neurodiversity in Bilingual Development Research: Recent Insights Through an Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion Lens

Background

As highlighted by research on typically developing children, various biases exist when evaluating bilingual children's abilities. These biases can lead to inequitable assessment of language and cognitive abilities—potentially over- or underestimating bilinguals’ skills. Recent reviews on neurodivergent bilingual children alluded to the possibility that these biases are also present in clinical research.

Aims

This review examines bilingual neurodiversity research in children through the lens of equity, diversity, and inclusion. Specifically, it evaluates potential biases in recent studies to determine whether linguistic and cognitive abilities are assessed equitably, identify the types of linguistic and neurodiverse experiences represented in research, and examine the roles bilingual individuals play in research.

Methods

We conducted an abbreviated systematic review with a multi-pronged search of databases and a manual search for quantitative studies on linguistic and cognitive abilities with bilingual neurodivergent children. The Joanna Briggs Institute Checklist was adapted for risk of bias assessment. Data was extracted and analysed from 95 studies, including study methods, bilingualism-related information (e.g., age of acquisition, language history tools, socioeconomic status), outcomes of interest (language, cognition), tasks (e.g., domain, name), and the main results or conclusions of each article.

Main Contribution

We found that equitable bilingual assessment of language and cognition was highly affected by the lack of culturally and linguistically appropriate tools. Most studies used case-control designs, contrasting neurodivergent bilinguals with monolingual or typically developing peers, which promotes a deficit-based monolingual-centred view in bilingual neurodiversity research. We also identified persistent challenges in defining and measuring bilingualism that complicate cross-comparison across studies and conditions. Research focus remained largely on developmental language disorder (DLD; n = 34) and autism spectrum disorder (ASD; n = 29) given their language symptomology, while acquired disorders are understudied. Additionally, there is a lack of community-based research that could offer more inclusive methods by involving bilingual communities throughout the research process.

Conclusions

This review emphasizes the need to adopt equitable and inclusive research practices to better understand and support neurodivergent bilingual children. Future research should embrace a nuanced understanding of bilingualism and neurodiversity, prioritizing inclusive methodologies as well as holistic assessments using culturally and linguistically appropriate tools to avoid misdiagnoses and ensure fair clinical evaluations of language and cognition.

WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS

What is already known on this subject
  • Prior research has demonstrated that neurotypical bilingual children are often compared to monolingual norms, which can introduce biases and result in mischaracterization of bilingual abilities. Monolingually normed assessments are inequitable for use with bilingual children.
What this paper adds to existing knowledge
  • This review examines biases in recent research on neurodivergent bilingual children, focusing on the assessment of cognitive and language abilities—skills also often evaluated by clinicians, including speech-language pathologists.
What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?
  • This review integrates a structured EDI framework to contextualise research on neurodiversity for clinicians and researchers. It highlights the need to implement holistic and culturally appropriate assessment methods for all bilingual children that can lead to more equitable evaluations and help to better support tailored interventions and inclusive clinical and research practices.
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来源期刊
International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders
International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders AUDIOLOGY & SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY-REHABILITATION
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
12.50%
发文量
116
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders (IJLCD) is the official journal of the Royal College of Speech & Language Therapists. The Journal welcomes submissions on all aspects of speech, language, communication disorders and speech and language therapy. It provides a forum for the exchange of information and discussion of issues of clinical or theoretical relevance in the above areas.
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