Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, MGH Institute of Health Professions, Boston, MA.
J Speech Lang Hear Res. 2021 May 11;64(5):1696-1711. doi: 10.1044/2021_JSLHR-20-00499. Epub 2021 Apr 20.
Purpose Intervention provided to school-age children with developmental language disorder often relies on the provision of performance feedback, yet it is unclear whether children with this disorder benefit from feedback-based learning. The study evaluates the effect of performance feedback on learning in children with developmental language disorder. Method Thirteen 8- to 12-year-old children with developmental language disorder and 14 age- and gender-matched children with typical language development completed two learning tasks whose objective was to pair nonword novel names with novel objects. The two tasks differed in the presence of performance feedback to guide learning. Learning outcomes on immediate and follow-up tests were compared between the feedback-based and feedback-free tasks. Additionally, an electrophysiological marker of feedback processing was compared between children with and without developmental language disorder. Results Children with developmental language disorder demonstrated poorer learning outcomes on both tasks when compared with their peers, but both groups achieved better accuracy on the task when compared with the task. Within the feedback-based task, children were more likely to repeat a correct response than to change it after positive feedback but were as likely to repeat an error as they were to correct it after receiving negative feedback. While children with typical language elicited a feedback-related negativity with greater amplitude to negative feedback, this event-related potential had no amplitude differences between positive and negative feedback in children with developmental language disorder. Conclusions Findings indicate that 8- to 12-year-old children benefit more from a feedback-free learning environment and that negative feedback is not as effective as positive feedback in facilitating learning in children. The behavioral and electrophysiological data provide evidence that feedback processing is impaired in children with developmental language disorders. Future research should evaluate feedback-based learning in children with this disorder using other learning paradigms.
目的 为学龄期语言发育障碍儿童提供的干预措施通常依赖于表现反馈,但目前尚不清楚该障碍儿童是否受益于基于反馈的学习。本研究评估了表现反馈对语言发育障碍儿童学习的影响。方法 13 名 8 至 12 岁的语言发育障碍儿童和 14 名年龄和性别匹配的具有典型语言发育的儿童完成了两个学习任务,其目的是将非词新名称与新物体配对。这两个任务在指导学习的表现反馈方面存在差异。在反馈和无反馈任务之间比较了即时和随访测试的学习结果。此外,还比较了语言发育障碍儿童和无语言发育障碍儿童之间反馈处理的电生理标志物。结果 与同龄人相比,语言发育障碍儿童在两个任务上的学习结果都较差,但与任务相比,两组在任务上的准确性都有所提高。在基于反馈的任务中,儿童在接收到正反馈后更有可能重复正确的反应而不是改变它,但在接收到负反馈后,他们重复错误的可能性与纠正错误的可能性相同。虽然具有典型语言的儿童在接收到负反馈时会产生更大振幅的反馈相关负性,但在语言发育障碍儿童中,正反馈和负反馈之间的这种事件相关电位没有振幅差异。结论 研究结果表明,8 至 12 岁的儿童从无反馈的学习环境中受益更多,并且在促进儿童学习方面,负反馈不如正反馈有效。行为和电生理数据提供的证据表明,语言发育障碍儿童的反馈处理受损。未来的研究应该使用其他学习范式评估该障碍儿童的基于反馈的学习。