| Literature DB >> 17079221 |
Klara Marton1, Richard G Schwartz, Lajos Farkas, Valeriya Katsnelson.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: English-speaking children with specific language impairment (SLI) perform more poorly than their typically developing peers in verbal working memory tasks where processing and storage are simultaneously required. Hungarian is a language with a relatively free word order and a rich agglutinative morphology. AIMS: To examine the effect of linguistic structure on working memory performance. It was examined whether syntactic complexity has a larger impact on working memory performance than sentence length in Hungarian-speaking children, similar to the findings in English speaking children. METHODS & PROCEDURES: In Experiment 1, performance accuracy was measured with two linguistic span tasks that included stimuli with varying sentence length and syntactic complexity. Experiment 2 examined the impact of sentence length and morphological complexity on working memory performance. OUTCOMES &Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 17079221 PMCID: PMC1761115 DOI: 10.1080/13682820500420418
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Lang Commun Disord ISSN: 1368-2822 Impact factor: 3.020