A comparison of learning and retention of a syntactic construction between Cantonese-speaking children with and without DLD in a priming task

•This is the structural priming study on Cantonese-speaking school-aged children with and without DLD.•The study examined the learning and retention of the indirect object relative clause.•Children with DLD did not learn the construction as well as their peers.•Children with DLD probably retained th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain and language 2024-04, Vol.251, p.105404-105404, Article 105404
Hauptverfasser: Wong, Anita M.-Y., Au, Cecilia W.-S., Chan, Angel, Momenian, Mohammad
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container_title Brain and language
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creator Wong, Anita M.-Y.
Au, Cecilia W.-S.
Chan, Angel
Momenian, Mohammad
description •This is the structural priming study on Cantonese-speaking school-aged children with and without DLD.•The study examined the learning and retention of the indirect object relative clause.•Children with DLD did not learn the construction as well as their peers.•Children with DLD probably retained the construction less well also. Procedural circuit Deficit Hypothesis (PDH) of Developmental Language Disorder (DLD) predicts problems with learning and retention of grammar. Twenty 7- to 9-year-old Cantonese-speaking children with DLD and their typically developing (TD) age peers participated in a syntactic priming task that was given in two sessions one week apart. Production of Indirect Object Relative Clause (IORC) was tested using a probe test before and after the priming task, and one week later. The study involved two cycles of learning and retention, and two levels of prior knowledge. Bayesian linear mixed effects modelling was used for data analysis. Children with DLD learned, and possibly retained, IORC less well than TD children after age, working memory and general grammatical knowledge were controlled for. No interaction effects were significant, meaning that cycle and prior knowledge affected both groups similarly in learning and retention. Results were discussed in relation to PDH and the Complementary Learning Systems Theory.
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Procedural circuit Deficit Hypothesis (PDH) of Developmental Language Disorder (DLD) predicts problems with learning and retention of grammar. Twenty 7- to 9-year-old Cantonese-speaking children with DLD and their typically developing (TD) age peers participated in a syntactic priming task that was given in two sessions one week apart. Production of Indirect Object Relative Clause (IORC) was tested using a probe test before and after the priming task, and one week later. The study involved two cycles of learning and retention, and two levels of prior knowledge. Bayesian linear mixed effects modelling was used for data analysis. Children with DLD learned, and possibly retained, IORC less well than TD children after age, working memory and general grammatical knowledge were controlled for. No interaction effects were significant, meaning that cycle and prior knowledge affected both groups similarly in learning and retention. 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subjects Bayes Theorem
Cantonese
Child
Developmental language disorder
DLD
Humans
Infant, Newborn
Language Development Disorders
Language Tests
Learning
Linguistics
Memory, Short-Term
Retention
Syntactic priming
title A comparison of learning and retention of a syntactic construction between Cantonese-speaking children with and without DLD in a priming task
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