Wimmer Eva, Rothweiler Monika, Penke Martina
University of Cologne, Department of Rehabilitation and Special Education, Psycholinguistics, Frangenheimstraße 4, D-50931 Koeln, Germany.
University of Bremen, Faculty of Inclusive Education, Section Inclusive Pedagogy and Special Needs Education, Developmental Speech and Language Disorders, Postfach 330440, D-28359 Bremen, Germany.
J Commun Disord. 2017 May;67:35-48. doi: 10.1016/j.jcomdis.2017.05.003. Epub 2017 May 13.
For children with sensorineural hearing loss the ability to understand wh-questions might be particularly challenging because they often have only restricted access to spoken language input during optimal periods of language acquisition. In previous research it has been suggested that this restricted input during critical stages in language acquisition might lead to syntactic deficits that persist into adolescence. In this study we want to pursue this issue by investigating the comprehension of wh-questions in German children with bilateral sensorineural hearing loss. We report results of a who-question comprehension task in a group of 21 3- to 4-year-old German hard-of-hearing children compared to a group of age-matched children with normal hearing. The group data and individual performance patterns suggest that the syntactic comprehension difficulties observed in some, but not all, of the children with hearing loss reflect a delay in the acquisition of who-question comprehension rather than a persistent syntactic deficit. Follow-up data elicited from a subgroup of children confirm this supposition.