Leonard Laurence B, Deevy Patricia, Wong Anita M-Y, Stokes Stephanie F, Fletcher Paul
Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907, USA.
Int J Lang Commun Disord. 2007 Mar-Apr;42(2):209-28. doi: 10.1080/13682820600624240.
Surprisingly little is known about the use of modal auxiliaries by children with specific language impairment (SLI). These forms fall within the category of grammatical morphology, an area of morphosyntax that is purportedly very weak in children with SLI.
Three studies were conducted to examine the use of modal auxiliaries by preschool-aged children with SLI.
METHODS & PROCEDURES: In each study, probe tasks were designed to create contexts that encouraged the use of modals to express the modality functions of ability and permission. In Studies 1 and 3, English-speaking children participated. In Study 2, the participants were Cantonese-speaking children. In each study, three groups of children participated: A group exhibiting SLI, a group of younger typically developing children (YTD), and a group of (older) typically developing children (OTD) matched with the SLI group according to age.
OUTCOME & RESULTS: In Study 1, English-speaking children with SLI were as proficient as YTD children, though less proficient than OTD children in the use of the modal can to express the modality functions of ability and permission. In Study 2, the same modality functions were studied in the speech of SLI, YTD and OTD groups who were speakers of Cantonese. In this language, tense is not employed, and therefore the modality function could be examined independent of formal tense. Results similar to those of Study 1 were obtained. Study 3 again studied SLI, YTD and OTD groups in English to determine whether the children's expression of ability differed across past (could) and non-past (can) contexts. The results for can replicated the findings from Study 1. However, the children with SLI were significantly more limited than both the YTD and OTD groups in their use of could.
The results suggest that most children with SLI have access to modality functions such as ability and permission. However, the findings of Study 3 suggest that they may have a reduced inventory of modal forms or difficulty expressing the same function in both past and non-past contexts. These potential areas of difficulty suggest possible directions for intervention.
令人惊讶的是,对于特定语言障碍(SLI)儿童使用情态助动词的情况,我们知之甚少。这些形式属于语法形态学范畴,而形态句法的这一领域据称在患有SLI的儿童中非常薄弱。
进行了三项研究,以考察学龄前SLI儿童对情态助动词的使用情况。
在每项研究中,探测任务的设计旨在营造鼓励使用情态动词来表达能力和许可这两种情态功能的语境。在研究1和研究3中,参与的是说英语的儿童。在研究2中,参与者是说粤语的儿童。在每项研究中,三组儿童参与其中:一组表现出SLI,一组年龄较小的发育正常儿童(YTD),以及一组根据年龄与SLI组匹配的(年龄较大的)发育正常儿童(OTD)。
在研究1中,患有SLI的说英语儿童在使用情态动词“can”来表达能力和许可的情态功能方面与YTD儿童一样熟练,但不如OTD儿童熟练。在研究2中,对说粤语的SLI组、YTD组和OTD组的言语进行了同样的情态功能研究。在这种语言中,不使用时态,因此可以独立于形式时态来考察情态功能。得到了与研究1相似的结果。研究3再次对说英语的SLI组、YTD组和OTD组进行研究,以确定儿童在过去(could)和非过去(can)语境中能力表达是否存在差异。“can”的结果重复了研究1的发现。然而,患有SLI的儿童在使用“could”方面比YTD组和OTD组都明显更受限制。
结果表明,大多数患有SLI的儿童能够使用能力和许可等情态功能。然而,研究3的结果表明,他们可能拥有的情态形式较少,或者在过去和非过去语境中表达相同功能存在困难。这些潜在的困难领域为干预提供了可能的方向。