Literature DB >> 30398612

Structural Relationship Between Cognitive Processing and Syntactic Sentence Comprehension in Children With and Without Developmental Language Disorder.

James W Montgomery1, Julia L Evans2, Jamison D Fargo3, Sarah Schwartz3, Ronald B Gillam4.   

Abstract

Purpose: We assessed the potential direct and indirect (mediated) influences of 4 cognitive mechanisms we believe are theoretically relevant to canonical and noncanonical sentence comprehension of school-age children with and without developmental language disorder (DLD). Method: One hundred seventeen children with DLD and 117 propensity-matched typically developing (TD) children participated. Comprehension was indexed by children identifying the agent in implausible sentences. Children completed cognitive tasks indexing the latent predictors of fluid reasoning (FLD-R), controlled attention (CATT), complex working memory (cWM), and long-term memory language knowledge (LTM-LK).
Results: Structural equation modeling revealed that the best model fit was an indirect model in which cWM mediated the relationship among FLD-R, CATT, LTM-LK, and sentence comprehension. For TD children, comprehension of both sentence types was indirectly influenced by FLD-R (pattern recognition) and LTM-LK (linguistic chunking). For children with DLD, canonical sentence comprehension was indirectly influenced by LTM-LK and CATT, and noncanonical comprehension was indirectly influenced just by CATT. Conclusions: cWM mediates sentence comprehension in children with DLD and TD children. For TD children, comprehension occurs automatically through pattern recognition and linguistic chunking. For children with DLD, comprehension is cognitively effortful. Whereas canonical comprehension occurs through chunking, noncanonical comprehension develops on a word-by-word basis. Supplemental Material: https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.7178939.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30398612      PMCID: PMC6440308          DOI: 10.1044/2018_JSLHR-L-17-0421

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Speech Lang Hear Res        ISSN: 1092-4388            Impact factor:   2.297


  84 in total

1.  Working memory, short-term memory, and general fluid intelligence: a latent-variable approach.

Authors:  Randall W Engle; Stephen W Tuholski; James E Laughlin; Andrew R A Conway
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Gen       Date:  1999-09

2.  Electrophysiology reveals semantic memory use in language comprehension.

Authors: 
Journal:  Trends Cogn Sci       Date:  2000-12-01       Impact factor: 20.229

3.  Quantity, not quality: the relationship between fluid intelligence and working memory capacity.

Authors:  Keisuke Fukuda; Edward Vogel; Ulrich Mayr; Edward Awh
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2010-10

4.  The acquisition of relative clause comprehension in Hebrew: a study of SLI and normal development.

Authors:  Naama Friedmann; Rama Novogrodsky
Journal:  J Child Lang       Date:  2004-08

5.  The nature of individual differences in working memory capacity: active maintenance in primary memory and controlled search from secondary memory.

Authors:  Nash Unsworth; Randall W Engle
Journal:  Psychol Rev       Date:  2007-01       Impact factor: 8.934

6.  The effects of variation on learning word order rules by adults with and without language-based learning disabilities.

Authors:  Hope Grunow; Tammie J Spaulding; Rebecca L Gómez; Elena Plante
Journal:  J Commun Disord       Date:  2006-01-10       Impact factor: 2.288

7.  Central and peripheral components of working memory storage.

Authors:  Nelson Cowan; J Scott Saults; Christopher L Blume
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Gen       Date:  2014-05-26

8.  Variability in comprehension strategy use in children with SLI: a dynamical systems account.

Authors:  Julia L Evans
Journal:  Int J Lang Commun Disord       Date:  2002 Apr-Jun       Impact factor: 3.020

9.  The measure matters: Language dominance profiles across measures in Spanish-English bilingual children.

Authors:  Lisa M Bedore; Elizabeth D Peña; Connie L Summers; Karin M Boerger; Maria D Resendiz; Kai Greene; Thomas M Bohman; Ronald B Gillam
Journal:  Biling (Camb Engl)       Date:  2012-03-20

10.  Working, declarative and procedural memory in specific language impairment.

Authors:  Jarrad A G Lum; Gina Conti-Ramsden; Debra Page; Michael T Ullman
Journal:  Cortex       Date:  2011-06-12       Impact factor: 4.027

View more
  6 in total

1.  Explicit Grammatical Intervention for Developmental Language Disorder: Three Approaches.

Authors:  Catherine H Balthazar; Susan Ebbels; Rob Zwitserlood
Journal:  Lang Speech Hear Serv Sch       Date:  2020-04-07       Impact factor: 2.983

2.  Children's syntactic parsing and sentence comprehension with a degraded auditory signal.

Authors:  Isabel A Martin; Matthew J Goupell; Yi Ting Huang
Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am       Date:  2022-02       Impact factor: 1.840

3.  Predictors of language proficiency in school-age Spanish-English bilingual children with and without developmental language disorder.

Authors:  Kerry Danahy Ebert; Madeline Reilly
Journal:  Biling (Camb Engl)       Date:  2021-11-08

Review 4.  A New Memory Perspective on the Sentence Comprehension Deficits of School-Age Children With Developmental Language Disorder: Implications for Theory, Assessment, and Intervention.

Authors:  James W Montgomery; Ronald B Gillam; Julia L Evans
Journal:  Lang Speech Hear Serv Sch       Date:  2021-04-07       Impact factor: 2.983

5.  Speech production factors and verbal working memory in children and adults with developmental language disorder.

Authors:  Gerard H Poll; Carol A Miller
Journal:  Appl Psycholinguist       Date:  2021-02-18

6.  Executive Function, Working Memory, and Verbal Fluency in Relation to Non-Verbal Intelligence in Greek-Speaking School-Age Children with Developmental Language Disorder.

Authors:  Asimina M Ralli; Elisavet Chrysochoou; Petros Roussos; Kleopatra Diakogiorgi; Panagiota Dimitropoulou; Diamanto Filippatou
Journal:  Brain Sci       Date:  2021-05-08
  6 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.