Non-Word Repetition in Children with Specific Language Impairment: A Deficit in Phonological Working Memory or in Long-Term Verbal Knowledge?

In this study we investigated the effects of long-term memory (LTM) verbal knowledge on short-term memory (STM) verbal recall in a sample of Italian children affected by different subtypes of specific language impairment (SLI). The aim of the study was to evaluate if phonological working memory (PWM...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cortex 2007-08, Vol.43 (6), p.769-776
Hauptverfasser: Casalini, Claudia, Brizzolara, Daniela, Chilosi, Anna, Cipriani, Paola, Marcolini, Stefania, Pecini, Chiara, Roncoli, Silvia, Burani, Cristina
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container_end_page 776
container_issue 6
container_start_page 769
container_title Cortex
container_volume 43
creator Casalini, Claudia
Brizzolara, Daniela
Chilosi, Anna
Cipriani, Paola
Marcolini, Stefania
Pecini, Chiara
Roncoli, Silvia
Burani, Cristina
description In this study we investigated the effects of long-term memory (LTM) verbal knowledge on short-term memory (STM) verbal recall in a sample of Italian children affected by different subtypes of specific language impairment (SLI). The aim of the study was to evaluate if phonological working memory (PWM) abilities of SLI children can be supported by LTM linguistic representations and if PWM performances can be differently affected in the various subtypes of SLI. We tested a sample of 54 children affected by Mixed Receptive-Expressive (RE), Expressive (Ex) and Phonological (Ph) SLI (DSM-IV - American Psychiatric Association, 1994) by means of a repetition task of words (W) and non-words (NW) differing in morphemic structure [morphological non-words (MNW), consisting of combinations of roots and affixes - and simple non-words - with no morphological constituency]. We evaluated the effects of lexical and morpho-lexical LTM representations on STM recall by comparing the repetition accuracy across the three types of stimuli. Results indicated that although SLI children, as a group, showed lower repetition scores than controls, their performance was affected similarly to controls by the type of stimulus and the experimental manipulation of the non-words (better repetition of W than MNW and NW, and of MNW than NW), confirming the recourse to LTM verbal representations to support STM recall. The influence of LTM verbal knowledge on STM recall in SLI improved with age and did not differ among the three types of SLI. However, the three types of SLI differed in the accuracy of their repetition performances (PMW abilities), with the Phonological group showing the best scores. The implications for SLI theory and practice are discussed.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/S0010-9452(08)70505-7
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Results indicated that although SLI children, as a group, showed lower repetition scores than controls, their performance was affected similarly to controls by the type of stimulus and the experimental manipulation of the non-words (better repetition of W than MNW and NW, and of MNW than NW), confirming the recourse to LTM verbal representations to support STM recall. The influence of LTM verbal knowledge on STM recall in SLI improved with age and did not differ among the three types of SLI. However, the three types of SLI differed in the accuracy of their repetition performances (PMW abilities), with the Phonological group showing the best scores. The implications for SLI theory and practice are discussed.</abstract><cop>Italy</cop><pub>Elsevier Srl</pub><pmid>17710828</pmid><doi>10.1016/S0010-9452(08)70505-7</doi><tpages>8</tpages></addata></record>
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subjects Analysis of Variance
Articulation Disorders - complications
Articulation Disorders - diagnosis
Articulation Disorders - physiopathology
Case-Control Studies
Child
Child, Preschool
Developmental Disabilities - complications
Developmental Disabilities - diagnosis
Developmental Disabilities - physiopathology
Female
Humans
Language Disorders - complications
Language Disorders - diagnosis
Language Disorders - physiopathology
long-term lexical knowledge
Male
Memory Disorders - complications
Memory Disorders - diagnosis
Memory Disorders - physiopathology
Memory, Short-Term - physiology
non-word repetition
phonological working memory
Reference Values
specific language impairment
Verbal Learning - physiology
Vocabulary
title Non-Word Repetition in Children with Specific Language Impairment: A Deficit in Phonological Working Memory or in Long-Term Verbal Knowledge?
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