为什么有特殊语言障碍的儿童比他们的同龄人更慢地命名图片?

M Lahey, J Edwards
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引用次数: 165

摘要

为了研究不同的认知过程在解释有特殊语言障碍(SLI)儿童相对于无语言障碍(NLI)儿童较慢的命名时间中的作用,我们设计了三个强调不同类型处理的任务:用不同延迟间隔呈现的信号来命名图片,在相同和不相关的启动物暴露的不同持续时间后命名,以及对非语言刺激的声音反应。4 ~ 9.5岁的特殊语言障碍儿童在命名和对非语言刺激的反应上显著慢于非语言障碍儿童,但命名前的延迟时间和命名前的初始暴露时间对两组儿童的影响相似。结果表明,命名速度与特殊语言障碍儿童较慢的非语言反应加工有关,而与语言或知觉加工速度无关。为了研究可能与语言表现模式相关的处理差异,我们研究了两个特殊语言障碍亚组的反应。语言问题涉及表达能力但不涉及接受能力的儿童的亚组并不比他们的非语言学习同龄人慢得多。同时涉及表达性语言和接受性语言的孩子的反应明显较慢,但这是受年龄影响的。研究结果从语言表现、年龄、任务变量和一个广义的速度限制因素等方面进行了讨论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Why do children with specific language impairment name pictures more slowly than their peers?

To examine the role of different cognitive processes in accounting for the slower naming times of children with specific language impairment (SLI) relative to peers with no language impairment (NLI), three tasks designed to stress different types of processing, were administered: naming pictures with the signal to respond presented at various delay intervals, naming following different durations of exposure to identical and unrelated primes, and vocally responding to nonlinguistic stimuli. Children with SLI, aged 4 to 9.5 years, were significantly slower than their NLI age peers on naming and on responding to nonlinguistic stimuli, but the effect of delay interval before naming and of duration of prime exposure before naming was similar for both groups. Results suggested that speed of naming is related to the slower nonlinguistic response processing of children with SLI and not to speed of their linguistic or perceptual processing. To examine differences in processing that might relate to pattern of language performance we examined responses of two subgroups of SLI. The subgroup of children whose language problems involved expressive but not receptive skills was not significantly slower than their NLI peers. The children whose problems involved both expressive and receptive language were significantly slower, but this was influenced by age. Findings are discussed in terms of language performance, age, task variables, and a generalized rate-limiting factor.

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