Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN.
Division of Speech-Language Pathology, Department of Rehabilitation Sciences, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston.
J Speech Lang Hear Res. 2023 Apr 12;66(4):1309-1333. doi: 10.1044/2022_JSLHR-22-00509. Epub 2023 Mar 10.
Children with developmental language disorder (DLD) have well-documented verb learning difficulties. In this study, we asked whether the inclusion of retrieval practice during the learning period would facilitate these children's verb learning relative to a similar procedure that provided no retrieval opportunities.
Eleven children with DLD ( = 60.09 months) and 12 children with typical language development (TD; = 59.92 months) learned four novel verbs in a repeated spaced retrieval (RSR) condition and four novel verbs in a repeated study (RS) condition. The words in the two conditions were heard an equal number of times, in the context of video-recorded actors performing novel actions.
Recall testing immediately after the learning period and 1 week later revealed greater recall for novel verbs in the RSR condition than for novel verbs in the RS condition. This was true for both groups, and for immediate as well as 1-week testing. The RSR advantage remained when children had to recall the novel verbs while watching new actors perform the novel actions. However, when tested in contexts requiring the children to inflect the novel verbs with - for the first time, the children with DLD were much less likely to do so than their peers with TD. Even words in the RSR condition were only inconsistently inflected.
Retrieval practice provides benefits to verb learning-an important finding given the challenges that verbs present to children with DLD. However, these benefits do not appear to automatically translate to the process of adding inflections to newly learned verbs but rather appear to be limited to the operations of learning the verbs' phonetic forms and mapping these forms onto associated actions.
发育性语言障碍(DLD)儿童有明确记录的动词学习困难。在这项研究中,我们询问在学习期间是否包括检索练习是否会相对于不提供检索机会的类似程序促进这些儿童的动词学习。
11 名 DLD 儿童(M = 60.09 个月)和 12 名具有典型语言发育的儿童(TD;M = 59.92 个月)在重复间隔检索(RSR)条件下学习四个新动词,在重复研究(RS)条件下学习四个新动词。在两种条件下,单词在视频录制的演员表演新动作的背景下听到的次数相等。
在学习期结束后立即以及 1 周后进行的回忆测试表明,在 RSR 条件下对新动词的回忆优于在 RS 条件下对新动词的回忆。这对两个组都是如此,无论是即时测试还是 1 周测试。当要求儿童在观看新演员表演新动作时回忆新动词时,RSR 优势仍然存在。但是,当在需要儿童首次用 - 来使新动词进行屈折的语境中进行测试时,与具有 TD 的同龄人相比,DLD 儿童的可能性要小得多。即使是 RSR 条件下的单词也只是不一致地被屈折。
检索练习为动词学习提供了益处 - 这是一个重要的发现,因为动词对 DLD 儿童构成了挑战。然而,这些好处似乎不会自动转化为向新学习的动词添加屈折的过程,而似乎仅限于学习动词的语音形式并将这些形式映射到相关动作的操作。