Dodwell Kristy, Bavin Edith L
School of Psychological Science, La Trobe University, Victoria, Australia.
Int J Lang Commun Disord. 2008 Mar-Apr;43(2):201-18. doi: 10.1080/13682820701366147.
Narratives have been used by a number of researchers to investigate the language of children with specific language impairment (SLI). While a number of explanations for SLI have been proposed, there is now mounting evidence that children with SLI have limited memory resources. Phonological memory has been the focus of the research on memory with this population. However, the use of narrative tasks to investigate memory limitations in SLI has not previously been undertaken.
The aims of the research were to investigate the narrative and memory abilities of 6-year-old children with SLI and the association between narrative skills and memory.
METHODS & PROCEDURES: Two studies were conducted. In Study 1 the performance of the children with SLI was compared with that of their peers with typical language development (AM), and to that of a younger group (LM) matched on expressive language (about 2 years younger). Children were asked to recall ('story recall') and show comprehension of a narrative they had been told, and also to tell a story based on a series of pictures ('story generation'), to recall their story and to answer comprehension questions about it. In Study 2 the children with SLI from Study 1 and the AM children from Study 1 were tested on four working memory tasks: word and digit span, the Recalling Sentences task from the Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals--Third Edition, and a dual-processing task. An inhibition task and an attention task were also included. It was predicted that children with SLI would perform more poorly than the AM group on measures of narrative telling, but comparably with the LM group. It was also predicted that the SLI group would perform more poorly than the AM group on both literal and inferencing comprehension questions but comparably with the LM group. The third prediction was that there would be significant associations between children's performance on the narrative tasks and the tasks measuring working memory.
OUTCOMES & RESULTS: In Study 1 the children with SLI performed more like the younger group on recall of a narrative they had heard, but more like their peers when asked to generate and recall their own narrative based on a series of pictures. The children with SLI had difficulty with inferencing questions. In Study 2 the impaired group performed significantly worse on measures of memory, showing a lower working memory capacity. The children with SLI made more errors on the attention task, but no group differences were found on the inhibition task. In comparing results from Studies 1 and 2, significant correlations were found between performance on the narrative tasks and memory tasks, but the contribution of memory to the narrative task scores differed for the two stories. The Recalling Sentences memory task was found to be the best overall measure for predicting variance on story comprehension and recall.
In support of previous research, the children with SLI showed problems with inferencing, linking directly observed or stated information to likely outcomes. They also showed a limited working memory capacity, and they were more likely to make errors in attention. A main finding was that the narrative abilities of the 6-year-old children were linked to their verbal working memory. The information the SLI group heard was harder to access than information they had been able to generate themselves based on a series of pictures. The findings suggest that children with SLI are likely to be at a disadvantage in classroom situations, particularly for information presented aurally and if the information is complex. The use of pictorial aids may help them encode the information. They would also benefit from having information broken into manageable units.
许多研究人员利用叙事来研究特定语言障碍(SLI)儿童的语言能力。虽然针对SLI已经提出了多种解释,但现在有越来越多的证据表明,患有SLI的儿童记忆资源有限。语音记忆一直是针对这一群体进行记忆研究的重点。然而,此前尚未有人使用叙事任务来研究SLI儿童的记忆局限性。
本研究旨在调查6岁SLI儿童的叙事和记忆能力,以及叙事技巧与记忆之间的关联。
进行了两项研究。在研究1中,将SLI儿童的表现与其语言发展正常的同龄人(AM组)以及在表达性语言方面相匹配的较年轻组(LM组,年龄小约2岁)进行比较。要求儿童回忆(“故事回忆”)并展示对所听叙事的理解,还要根据一系列图片讲述一个故事(“故事生成”),回忆自己讲的故事并回答关于该故事的理解问题。在研究2中,对研究1中的SLI儿童和AM儿童进行了四项工作记忆任务测试:单词和数字广度、《语言基本能力临床评估第三版》中的句子回忆任务以及一项双重处理任务。还包括一项抑制任务和一项注意力任务。预计SLI儿童在叙事讲述测试中的表现会比AM组差,但与LM组相当。还预计SLI组在字面理解和推理理解问题上的表现会比AM组差,但与LM组相当。第三个预测是儿童在叙事任务上的表现与测量工作记忆的任务之间将存在显著关联。
在研究1中,SLI儿童在回忆所听叙事时的表现更像较年轻组,但在被要求根据一系列图片生成并回忆自己的叙事时,表现更像同龄人。SLI儿童在推理问题上存在困难。在研究2中,受损组在记忆测试中的表现明显更差,显示出较低的工作记忆容量。SLI儿童在注意力任务上犯的错误更多,但在抑制任务上未发现组间差异。在比较研究1和研究2的结果时,发现叙事任务和记忆任务的表现之间存在显著相关性,但两个故事中记忆对叙事任务分数的贡献有所不同。发现句子回忆记忆任务是预测故事理解和回忆差异的最佳总体指标。
与先前的研究一致,SLI儿童在推理方面存在问题,即难以将直接观察到或陈述的信息与可能的结果联系起来。他们还表现出有限的工作记忆容量,并且在注意力方面更容易出错。一个主要发现是,6岁儿童的叙事能力与他们的言语工作记忆有关。SLI组听到的信息比他们根据一系列图片自己生成的信息更难获取。研究结果表明,SLI儿童在课堂环境中可能处于劣势,特别是对于以听觉形式呈现且信息复杂的情况。使用图片辅助工具可能有助于他们对信息进行编码。将信息分解为可管理的单元对他们也有益处。