| Literature DB >> 27031708 |
Chantal N van Dijk1, Merel van Witteloostuijn2, Nada Vasić1, Sergey Avrutin3, Elma Blom1.
Abstract
When sending text messages on their mobile phone to friends, children often use a special type of register, which is called textese. This register allows the omission of words and the use of textisms: instances of non-standard written language such as 4ever (forever). Previous studies have shown that textese has a positive effect on children's literacy abilities. In addition, it is possible that children's grammar system is affected by textese as well, as grammar rules are often transgressed in this register. Therefore, the main aim of this study was to investigate whether the use of textese influences children's grammar performance, and whether this effect is specific to grammar or language in general. Additionally, studies have not yet investigated the influence of textese on children's cognitive abilities. Consequently, the secondary aim of this study was to find out whether textese affects children's executive functions. To investigate this, 55 children between 10 and 13 years old were tested on a receptive vocabulary and grammar performance (sentence repetition) task and various tasks measuring executive functioning. In addition, text messages were elicited and the number of omissions and textisms in children's messages were calculated. Regression analyses showed that omissions were a significant predictor of children's grammar performance after various other variables were controlled for: the more words children omitted in their text messages, the better their performance on the grammar task. Although textisms correlated (marginally) significantly with vocabulary, grammar and selective attention scores and omissions marginally significantly with vocabulary scores, no other significant effects were obtained for measures of textese in the regression analyses: neither for the language outcomes, nor for the executive function tasks. Hence, our results show that textese is positively related to children's grammar performance. On the other hand, use of textese does not affect--positively nor negatively--children's executive functions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27031708 PMCID: PMC4816572 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0152409
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Descriptive statistics for children’s age, raw and norm scores on nonverbal intelligence (IQ) and socio-economic status (SES).
| Age | Nonverbal IQ | SES | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Raw | Norm | |||
| 10;5 | 39.4 | 106.5 | 7.2 | |
| 0;8 | 5.03 | 12.6 | 1.5 | |
| 10–13 | 30–52 | 85–139 | 2.5–9 | |
Note. Nonverbal IQ scores are based on the short version of Wechsler’s nonverbal intelligence test; SES scores are based on parental education, as gathered through telephone interviews
Text message in Dutch, Dutch transcription and English translation.
| Utterance | Dutch text message | Dutch transcription | English translation |
|---|---|---|---|
| heey hgh | Hoi, hoe gaat het? | Hi, how are you? | |
| wr ben je | Waar ben je? | Where are you? | |
| vanav afspreke? | Wil je vanavond afspreken? | Do you want to meet tonight? | |
| Wat wil je doen ☺ | Wat wil je doen? | What would you like to do? |
Means, standard deviations and ranges of children’s use of textese in various types of messages.
| Elicited reply | Scenarios | Spontaneous messages | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Textism ratio | Omission ratio | Textism ratio | Omission ratio | Textism ratio | Omission ratio | |
| 13.50 | 27.88 | 13.62 | 9.21 | 24.16 | 7.37 | |
| 15.67 | 17.59 | 11.75 | 7.49 | 28.92 | 8.22 | |
| 0–53.85 | 0–63.64 | 0–51.50 | 0–37.84 | 0–150.00 | 0–25.00 | |
| 55 | 55 | 55 | 55 | 35 | 35 | |
Correlation matrix of children’s textism ratio and omission ratio on the elicitation tasks and in their spontaneous messages.
| Textism ratio | Omission ratio | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Elicited reply | Scenarios | Spontaneous messages | Elicited reply | Scenarios | Spontaneous messages | |
| 1.00 | .59 | .29 | 1.00 | .20 | .17 | |
| 55 | 1.00 | .54 | 55 | 1.00 | .08 | |
| 35 | 35 | 1.00 | 35 | 35 | 1.00 | |
†p < .1;
*p < .05;
**p < .01
Means, standard deviations and ranges of texting characteristics.
| Words | Utterances | Textism ratio | Omission ratio | Typo ratio | Error ratio | Frequency | ToP | IP | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 101.82 | 21.51 | 12.69 | 13.26 | 2.78 | 2.50 | 26.00 | 2.33 | 3.79 | |
| 29.72 | 4.30 | 10.54 | 9.75 | 3.62 | 1.87 | 104.19 | 1.16 | 0.91 | |
| 48–175 | 14–33 | 0–50.0 | 1.4–54.2 | 0–18.2 | 0–7.6 | 0–700 | 0–4 | 2–5 |
Note. ToP = time owning phone; and IP = importance phone.
Children’s mean raw and norm scores, standard deviations and ranges on the receptive vocabulary, grammar, nonverbal intelligence and verbal short-term memory task.
| Vocabulary | Grammar | Nonverbal IQ | VSTM | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Raw | Norm | Raw | Norm | Raw | Norm | Raw | |
| 132.7 | 105.2 | 67.51 | 9.9 | 39.4 | 106.5 | 27.0 | |
| 9.79 | 10.85 | 9.98 | 2.24 | 5.03 | 12.59 | 3.54 | |
| 103–150 | 72–135 | 43–85 | 5–14 | 30–52 | 85–139 | 19–36 | |
Note. VSTM = verbal short-term memory.
Correlation matrix of children’s background measures, use of textese, frequency of texting and performance on the language tasks.
| Age | SES | Nonverbal IQ | VSTM | Frequency | Textism ratio | Omission ratio | Vocabulary | Grammar | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.00 | -.39 | -.02 | -.03 | -.02 | .31 | .27 | .10 | .02 | |
| 55 | 1.00 | .17 | -.01 | -.20 | -.23 | -.16 | -.06 | -.04 | |
| 55 | 55 | 1.00 | .26 | -.03 | -.06 | .02 | .21 | .16 | |
| 55 | 55 | 55 | 1.00 | .25 | .20 | .16 | .24 | .44 | |
| 50 | 50 | 50 | 50 | 1.00 | .28 | -.15 | .05 | -.02 | |
| 53 | 53 | 53 | 53 | 48 | 1.00 | .12 | .27 | .33 | |
| 53 | 53 | 53 | 53 | 48 | 51 | 1.00 | .21 | .32 | |
| 55 | 55 | 55 | 55 | 55 | 53 | 53 | 1.00 | .61 | |
| 55 | 55 | 55 | 55 | 55 | 55 | 55 | 55 | 1.00 |
Note. SES = socioeconomic status; and VSTM = verbal short-term memory.
†p < .1;
*p < .05;
**p < .01
Hierarchical regression analysis with children’s receptive vocabulary scores as dependent variable.
| ΔR2 | B | SE B | β | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| .14 | ||||
| Constant | 94.08 | 23.19 | ||
| Age | 1.23 | 1.78 | .09 | |
| VSTM | 0.95 | 0.35 | .36 | |
| .03 | ||||
| Constant | 104.84 | 24.45 | ||
| Age | 0.32 | 1.90 | .02 | |
| VSTM | 0.87 | 0.36 | .33 | |
| Textism ratio | 0.18 | 0.14 | .19 | |
| .04 | ||||
| Constant | 120.79 | 26.27 | ||
| Age | -1.01 | 2.07 | -.08 | |
| VSTM | 0.70 | 0.37 | .27 | |
| Textism ratio | 0.18 | 0.14 | .19 | |
| Omission ratio | 0.51 | 0.33 | .23 | |
| .25 | ||||
| Constant | 84.72 | 23.34 | ||
| Age | 0.79 | 1.77 | .06 | |
| VSTM | 0.07 | 0.34 | .03 | |
| Textism ratio | -0.02 | 0.12 | -.02 | |
| Omission ratio | 0.09 | 0.29 | .04 | |
| Grammar | 0.56 | 0.12 | .65 |
Note. VSTM = verbal short-term memory.
†p < .1;
*p < .05;
**p < .01
Hierarchical regression analysis with children’s grammar scores as dependent variable.
| ΔR2 | B | SE B | β | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| .25 | ||||
| Constant | 19.40 | 25.21 | ||
| Age | 0.65 | 1.94 | .04 | |
| VSTM | 1.52 | 0.38 | .50 | |
| .07 | ||||
| Constant | 37.84 | 25.70 | ||
| Age | -0.88 | 1.99 | -.06 | |
| VSTM | 1.36 | 0.38 | .45 | |
| Textism ratio | 0.32 | 0.15 | .29 | |
| .07 | ||||
| Constant | 59.44 | 26.53 | ||
| Age | -2.60 | 2.06 | -.17 | |
| VSTM | 1.10 | 0.38 | .36 | |
| Textism ratio | 0.29 | 0.14 | .26 | |
| Omission ratio | 0.59 | 0.26 | .30 | |
| .11 | ||||
| Constant | 13.35 | 28.57 | ||
| Age | -2.18 | 1.90 | -.14 | |
| VSTM | 0.79 | 0.36 | .26 | |
| Textism ratio | 0.19 | 0.13 | .17 | |
| Omission ratio | 0.50 | 0.24 | .25 | |
| Vocabulary | 0.39 | 0.13 | .37 |
Note. VSTM = verbal short-term memory.
†p < .1;
*p < .05;
**p < .01
Mean scores, standard deviations and ranges for children’s selective attention, visuospatial working memory and digit span backwards scores.
| Selective attention | VSM | VWM | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2.99 | 16.40 | 14.60 | |
| .83 | 3.11 | 3.86 | |
| 1.72–5.33 | 10–24 | 8–28 |
Note. VSM = visuospatial memory; and VWM = verbal working memory.
Mean scores, standard deviations and ranges for the children’s reaction time on the Flanker task.
| Global | Congruent trials | Incongruent trials | Flanker effect | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 618.82 | 601.31 | 636.87 | 35.57 | |
| 103.32 | 103.36 | 108.51 | 48.31 | |
| 447.33–846.92 | 449.25–844.11 | 404.63 | -52.11–197.54 |
Correlation matrix of children’s performance on the executive functions tasks.
| Selective attention | VSM | VWM | Flanker global RTs | Flanker congruent RTs | Flanker incongruent RTs | Flanker effect | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| -.02 | .01 | .05 | .02 | .03 | .01 | -.16 | |
| .23 | .06 | .07 | .03 | .05 | -.01 | -.04 | |
| -.13 | .74 | .13 | -.38 | -.35 | -.43 | -.07 | |
| -.10 | .11 | .35 | -.35 | -.40 | -.29 | .15 | |
| -.17 | .00 | -.07 | -.02 | -.00 | -.02 | .05 | |
| -.24 | -.14 | -.26 | -.08 | -.07 | -.07 | -.09 | |
| -.02 | .11 | -.05 | -.17 | -.19 | -.14 | .11 | |
| 1.00 | .05 | -.05 | .05 | .08 | .01 | -.10 | |
| 55 | 1.00 | .07 | -.34 | -.29 | -.38 | -.09 | |
| 55 | 55 | 1.00 | -.12 | -.16 | -.10 | .03 | |
| 49 | 49 | 49 | 1.00 | .97 | .97 | .11 | |
| 49 | 49 | 49 | 49 | 1.00 | .90 | -.07 | |
| 49 | 49 | 49 | 49 | 49 | 1.00 | .30 | |
| 49 | 49 | 49 | 49 | 49 | 49 | 1.00 |
Note. VSM = visuospatial memory; VWM = verbal working memory; RT = reaction time; SES = socioeconomic status; VSTM = verbal short-term memory.
†p < .1;
*p < .05;
**p < .01