Department of Psychology, Georgia State University, Atlanta.
Waisman Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Am J Speech Lang Pathol. 2019 Aug 9;28(3):1127-1138. doi: 10.1044/2019_AJSLP-18-0106. Epub 2019 Jun 13.
Purpose Children with dyslexia often struggle with nonphonological aspects of language and executive functioning. The purpose of this study was to investigate the impact of executive functioning on language abilities at both structural (e.g., grammar in sentences) and functional (e.g., narrative) levels in 92 third- and 4th-grade students with dyslexia. Additionally, we asked if working memory updating contributed a significant amount of variance in narrative language ability beyond what would be expected by students' structural language skills alone. Method Students' language and executive functioning skills were evaluated using a range of language and cognitive measures including the Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals-Fourth Edition (Semel, Wiig, & Secord, 2003), the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test-Fourth Edition (Dunn & Dunn, 2007), the Test of Narrative Language (Gillam & Pearson, 2004), the Delis-Kaplan Executive Function Scale (Kaplan, Kramer, & Delis, 2001), and the Corsi Block-Tapping Test (WISC-IV Integrated; Kaplan, Fein, Kramer, Delis, & Morris, 2004). Results Low correlations between the language measures suggested that each of these assessments captures a unique element of language ability for children with dyslexia. Hierarchical regression analysis indicated that working memory updating accounted for a significant amount of unique variance in oral narrative production beyond what would be expected by structural language ability. Conclusions The range of performance found across language measures suggests that it may be important to include a variety of language measures assessing both structural and functional language skills when evaluating children with dyslexia. Including cognitive measures of executive functioning may also be key to determine if deficits in working memory updating are contributing to functional expressive language difficulties.
目的 患有阅读障碍的儿童通常在语言的非语音和执行功能方面存在困难。本研究的目的是调查执行功能对 92 名 3 年级和 4 年级阅读障碍学生语言能力的结构(如句子中的语法)和功能(如叙事)层面的影响。此外,我们还询问了工作记忆更新是否会在叙事语言能力方面产生显著的差异,而不仅仅是学生的结构语言技能所预期的。
方法 使用一系列语言和认知测试评估学生的语言和执行功能技能,包括临床语言基础评估第四版(Semel、Wiig 和 Secord,2003)、Peabody 图片词汇测试第四版(Dunn 和 Dunn,2007)、叙事语言测试(Gillam 和 Pearson,2004)、德里克 - 卡普兰执行功能量表(Kaplan、Kramer 和 Delis,2001)和科西积木测试(WISC-IV 综合;Kaplan、Fein、Kramer、Delis 和 Morris,2004)。
结果 语言测试之间的低相关性表明,这些评估中的每一项都为阅读障碍儿童的语言能力捕捉到了独特的元素。层次回归分析表明,工作记忆更新在口头叙事生成方面解释了大量独特的差异,而不仅仅是结构语言能力所预期的。
结论 在语言测试中发现的一系列表现表明,在评估阅读障碍儿童时,可能重要的是包括一系列评估结构和功能语言技能的语言测试。包括执行功能的认知测试也可能是确定工作记忆更新缺陷是否导致功能表达语言困难的关键。