| Literature DB >> 19343569 |
Andrew J O Whitehouse1, E A Line, Helen J Watt, Dorothy V M Bishop.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Developmental language disorder is a heterogeneous diagnostic category. Little research has compared the long-term outcomes of children with different subtypes of language impairment. AIMS: To determine whether the pattern of language impairment in childhood related to language and literacy outcomes in adulthood. METHODS & PROCEDURES: Adults who took part in previous studies as children were traced. There were four groups of participants, each with a different childhood diagnosis: specific language impairment (SLI; n = 19, mean age at follow-up = 24;8), pragmatic language impairment (PLI; n = 7, mean age at follow-up = 22;3), autism spectrum disorder (ASD; n = 11; mean age at follow-up = 21;9), and no childhood diagnosis (typical; n = 12; mean age at follow-up = 21;6). Participants were administered a battery of language and literacy tests. OUTCOMES &Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19343569 PMCID: PMC2892753 DOI: 10.1080/13682820802708080
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Lang Commun Disord ISSN: 1368-2822 Impact factor: 3.020
Studies in which the current participants took part in childhood
| Cohort | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | B | C | D | E | F | |
| Research | Analysis of conversational ability in language impairment | Analysis of conversational ability in PLI | Analysis of conversational ability in language impairment | Electrophysiological study of auditory processing in SLI | Behavioural investigation of borderlands of SLI and Autism | Behavioural investigation of borderlands of SLI and Autism |
| Reference | ||||||
| Assessments at T1 | ||||||
| Specific language impairment (SLI) diagnosis | Based upon teacher and researcher judgement | Not recruited | Scored 1 SD below the mean on at least one linguistic testScoring ≤10 on CCC precursor | Scoring more than 1 SD below the age-expected level on at least two linguistic tests | Scored 1 SD below the mean on at least one linguistic testScoring > 132 on pragmatic composite of CCC | Standard scores more than −1.25 SD below the mean on two of the three linguistic tests |
| Pragmatic language impairment (PLI) diagnosis | Based upon teacher and/or researcher judgement | Initially identified by teachers, researchers and/or clinicians Scoring ≥12 on CCC precursor | Initially identified by teachers, researchers and/or clinicians Scoring ≥12 on CCC precursor | Not recruited | Scoring<133 on pragmatic composite of CCC | Teacher and/or clinician judgement of significant pragmatic difficulties Confirmed via CCC-2 |
Notes: All participants had a non-verbal IQ within the normal range. The measures used as an index of ability at T1 are shown in bold.
BPVS, British Picture Vocabulary Scale (Dunn et al.1982); BPVS-II, British Picture Vocabulary Scale — Second Edition (Dunn et al.1997); CCC, Children's Communication Checklist (Bishop 1998); CCC-2, Children's Communication Checklist — Second Edition (Bishop 2003); CELF-R-RS, Recalling Sentences Subtest from the Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals — Revised (Semel et al.1987); CELF-III-CD, Concepts and Directions Subtest from the Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals — Third Edition (Semel et al.1995); CELF-III-RS, Recalling Sentences Subtest from the Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals — Third Edition (Semel ); ITPA, Illinois Test of Psycholinguistic Ability — Revised Edition (Kirk et al.1968); MLU, mean length of utterance; PLI, pragmatic language impairment; RCPM, Raven's Coloured Progressive Matrices (Raven et al.1986); RSPM, Raven's Standard Progressive Matrices (Raven et al.1992); SLI, specific language impairment; TLC-RS, Recreating Sentences Subtest from the Test of Language Competence — Expanded Edition (Wiig and Secord 1989); TROG, Test for Reception of Grammar (Bishop 1989); WASI PIQ, Wechsler Abbreviated Scales of Intelligence — Performance IQ (Wechsler and Chen 1999); WISC-R, Wechsler Intelligence Scales for Children — Revised (Wechsler 1974); and WISC-R-VC, Verbal Comprehension Subtest of the Wechsler Intelligence Scales for Children — Revised (Wechsler 1974).
Mean (standard deviation) age and age range of participants at initial testing (T1) and at follow-up (T2). Also included is information about which study the participants took part in at T1
| Specific language impairment (SLI) ( | Pragmatic language impairment (PLI) ( | Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) ( | Typical ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age at T1 | 11;11 (3;0) | 9;7 (2;3) | 10;2 (3;2) | 11;2 (2;10) |
| Range | 6;1–15;7 | 7;0–13;9 | 6;2–15;11 | 7;0–15;7 |
| Age at T2 | 24;8 (4;4) | 22;3 (5;4) | 21;9 (4;0) | 21;6 (3;2) |
| Range | 16;5–31;0 | 16;2–28;9 | 16;1–28;9 | 18;0–28;9 |
| A | 8 M | 2 M | 1 M | – |
| B | – | 1 M | 1 M | – |
| C | 1 M | 1 F | 4 M | 1 M, 3 F |
| D | 2 M, 5 F | – | 1 M | 3 M, 5 F |
| E | 1 M | 2 M | 2 M | – |
| F | 1 M | 1 M | 2 M | – |
Note: M, male; F, female.
Structural language severity ratings at initial testing (T1) and at follow-up (T2)
| Severity ratings |
|---|
| T1: Cohorts A, C, D, E, F = good, within normal limits on the three linguistic tasks administered; fair, within normal limits on two tasks; and poor, within normal limits on one or no tasks. Cohort B = good, within normal limits on the two tasks administered; fair, within normal limits on one; and poor, within limits on no task. |
| T2: Good: within normal limits on the BPVS-II (raw score ≥134), TROG-E, MLUw and memory for sentences task from the NEPSY; fair, within normal limits on three of these tasks; poor, within normal limits on two or less of these tasks. |
Mean (standard deviation) performance of the four groups on the battery of cognitive and language tests at follow-up. Only statistically significant differences are presented
| Domain | Assessment | Specific language impairment (SLI) ( | Pragmatic language impairment (PLI) ( | Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) ( | Typical (T) ( | Degrees of freedom (d.f.) | Partial eta2 | Statistical significant differences | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-verbal IQ | WASI (ss) | 97 (16.95) | 105.71 (16.58) | 103.36 (19.35) | 118.5 (8.61) | 4.45 | 0.008 | 0.23 | SLI<T | |
| Structural language | Goldman–Fristoe ( | 4.06 (3.11) | 1.43 (1.81) | 1.64 (2.16) | 0.67 (1.44) | 5.64 | 0.001 | 0.28 | SLI<T | |
| BPVS-II (rs) | 130.06 (13.68) | 127.43 (14.79) | 122.73 (21) | 146.08 (6.67) | 5.53 | 0.003 | 0.27 | (ASD = SLI)<T | ||
| TROG-E (ss) | 82.77 (13.57) | 90.43 (24.33) | 95.54 (11.56) | 102 (4.35) | 5.17 | 0.003 | 0.26 | SLI<T | ||
| Narrative | Initial telling (ss) | 88.00 (25.53) | 99.14 (25.56) | 89.18 (18.95) | 104.5 (16.48) | 1.64 | 0.19 | 0.1 | No differences | |
| Delayed telling (ss) | 90.39 (24.95) | 101.71 (25.66) | 82.82 (11.88) | 107.33 (17.68) | 3.14 | 0.04 | 0.18 | ASD<T | ||
| Comprehension (ss) | 92.06 (20.98) | 79.14 (36.97) | 86.64 (22.61) | 106.42 (15.74) | 2.47 | 0.08 | 0.14 | No differences | ||
| MLUw (ss) | 93.39 (16.33) | 102.71 (22.57) | 98 (26.88) | 93.5 (18.59) | .44 | 0.23 | 0.03 | No differences | ||
| Phonological awareness | Spoonerisms ( | 10.56 (9.57) | 19.29 (6.94) | 17.36 (10.01) | 22.5 (1.73) | 5.75 | 0.002 | 0.28 | SLI<T | |
| Verbal short-term-memory | Non-word repetition (rs) | 24.55 (11.33) | 36.42 (3.82) | 33.90 (8.79) | 41.08 (3.42) | 9.93 | <0.001 | 0.4 | SLI<(PLI = ASD = T) | |
| Sentence repetition (rs) | 19.11 (5.67) | 23.71 (3.59) | 22.18 (4.73) | 29.16 (2.52) | 11.83 | <0.001 | 0.45 | (SLI = ASD)<T | ||
| Pragmatic language | Structural language composite (SLC) (rs) | 24 (12.96) | 12.57 (8.77) | 25.36 (13.94) | 0.6 (1.07) | 11.8 | <0.001 | 0.48 | T<(ASD = SLI) | |
| Pragmatic language composite (PLC) (rs) | 19.29 (9.28) | 21.29 (11.21) | 37.27 (10.93) | 0.5 (0.85) | 28.66 | <0.001 | 0.69 | T<(SLI = PLI)<ASD | ||
| Structural–pragmatic mismatch (rs) | 4.36 (6.83) | −7.71 (8.92) | −11.91 (10.66) | 0 (0.92) | 11.5 | <0.001 | 0.44 | (ASD = PLI)<SLI |
Notes: rs, Raw scores; ss, standard scores.
SLI = 14; PLI = 7, ASD = 11, Typical = 10. A high score denotes impairment.
Figure 1Scatterplot showing the relationship between the structural language composite(SLC) and the pragmatic language composite (PLC) of the Communication Checklist — Adult (CC-A). Higher scores on each index indicate greater deficit.
Mean performance (standard deviation) of the specific language impairment (SLI), pragmatic language impairment (PLI), autism spectrum disorder (ASD), and typical (T) groups on the battery of literacy tests. Only statistically significant differences are presented
| Assessments | SLI ( | PLI ( | ASD ( | T ( | Partial eta2 | Statistical significant differences | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OSCCI spelling test ( | 22.94 (9.66) | 30 (9.68) | 27.45 (7.23) | 36 (3.38) | 6.58 | <0.01 | 0.31 | SLI<T |
| TOWRE real word (ss) | 72.22 (5.8) | 79.14 (7.9) | 83.36 (14.36) | 94.75 (10) | 13.32 | <0.01 | 0.48 | (SLI, PLI, ASD)<T; SLI<ASD |
| TOWRE non-word (ss) | 68.72 (14.61) | 86.39 (7.13) | 91.18 (18.76) | 98.17 (14.44) | 10.85 | <0.01 | 0.43 | SLI<(T = PLI = ASD) |
| Proof reading ( | 5.44 (3.09) | 8.43 (4.28) | 7.73 (3.1) | 9.58 (1.88) | 4.85 | <0.01 | 0.25 | SLI<T |
| Proof reading (time, seconds) | 111.46 (33.1) | 77.21 (27.12) | 83.46 (15.68) | 66.68 (21.28) | 7.87 | <0.01 | 0.35 | SLI<(T = PLI = ASD) |
| Non-word passage ( | 21.94 (10.15) | 13.29 (11.34) | 20.5 (21.95) | 6.67 (3.75) | 3.8 | <0.05 | 0.21 | (SLI = ASD)<T |
| Non-word passage (time, seconds) | 126.89 (49) | 77.99 (37.07) | 69.64 (41.63) | 59.07 (13.59) | 8.9 | <0.01 | 0.38 | SLI<(T = PLI = ASD) |
Change in linguistic ability over time
| T2 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Poor | Fair | Good | ||
| T1 | Poor | 11 SLI; 5 ASD, 1 PLI | 1 SLI, 1 PLI; 4 ASD | 2 SLI, 1 PLI, 1 ASD |
| Fair | 3 SLI, 2 PLI | 1 PLI, 1 Typical | 1 SLI, 1 PLI, 1 Typical | |
| Good | 1 ASD | 2 Typical | 8 Typical | |
Note: ASD, autism spectrum disorder; PLI, pragmatic language impairment; SLI, specific language impairment.