The University of Sydney, Camperdown, NSW, Australia.
Western Sydney University, Penrith, NSW, Australia.
Int J Lang Commun Disord. 2024 May-Jun;59(3):913-931. doi: 10.1111/1460-6984.12967. Epub 2023 Oct 30.
Children with phonological impairment present with pattern-based errors in their speech production. While some children have difficulties with speech perception and/or the establishment of robust underlying phonological representations, the nature of phonological impairment in children is still not well understood. Given that phonological and lexical development are closely linked, one way to better understand the nature of the problem in phonological impairment is to examine word learning abilities in children.
To examine word learning and its relationship with speech perception, speech production and vocabulary knowledge in children aged 4-5 years. There were two variables of interest: speech production abilities ranging from phonological impairment to typical speech; and vocabulary abilities ranging from typical to above average ('lexically precocious').
METHODS & PROCEDURES: Participants were 49 Australian-English-speaking children aged 48-69 months. Children were each taught four novel non-words (out of a selection of eight) through stories, and word learning was assessed at 1 week post-initial exposure. Word learning was assessed using two measures: confrontation naming and story retell naming. Data were analysed by group using independent-samples t-tests and Mann-Whitney U-tests, and continuously using multiple linear regression.
OUTCOMES & RESULTS: There was no significant difference in word learning ability of children with and without phonological impairment, but regardless of speech group, children with above average vocabulary had significantly better word learning abilities than children with average vocabulary. In multiple linear regression, vocabulary was the only significant predictor of variance in word learning ability.
CONCLUSIONS & IMPLICATIONS: Children with phonological impairment can be lexically precocious and learn new words like their peers without phonological impairment. Contrary to expectations, vocabulary knowledge rather than expressive phonological ability explained variance in measures of word learning. These findings question an assumption that children with phonological impairment have underspecified phonological representations. They also highlight the heterogeneity among children with phonological impairment and the need to better understand the nature of their difficulty learning the phonological system of the ambient language.
What is already known on the subject There is limited research examining the word learning abilities of children with phonological impairment. Most previous research focuses on word properties such as phonotactic probability and neighbourhood density. Within the existing literature there are different reports and conclusions regarding the word learning abilities of children with phonological impairment and whether their word learning differs from that of children with typically developing speech. What this study adds to existing knowledge This study found that vocabulary was the strongest predictor of word learning across children with and without phonological impairment. There was no significant difference in word learning ability between children with and without phonological impairment. However, children with lexically precocious vocabulary abilities were significantly better at word learning than children with average vocabulary abilities. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work? Findings from this study support the importance of assessing and considering measures of word learning-including vocabulary-when working with children with phonological impairment. This study indicates that it is possible to use stories coupled with measures of confrontation naming and story retell to gain deeper insight into children's word learning abilities.
患有语音障碍的儿童在言语产生中表现出基于模式的错误。虽然有些儿童在言语感知和/或建立强大的基础语音表征方面存在困难,但语音障碍儿童的语音障碍性质仍未得到很好的理解。鉴于语音和词汇发展密切相关,了解语音障碍问题性质的一种方法是检查儿童的词汇学习能力。
研究 4-5 岁儿童的词汇学习能力及其与言语感知、言语产生和词汇知识的关系。有两个感兴趣的变量:言语产生能力从语音障碍到典型言语不等;词汇能力从典型到高于平均水平(“词汇早熟”)不等。
参与者为 49 名 48-69 个月大的澳大利亚英语儿童。通过故事向每个孩子教授四个新的非单词(从八个中选择),并在初次接触后一周评估词汇学习能力。词汇学习能力通过两种方法进行评估:对词命名和故事复述命名。通过独立样本 t 检验和曼-惠特尼 U 检验对组间数据进行分析,并通过多元线性回归对连续数据进行分析。
语音障碍儿童和无语音障碍儿童的词汇学习能力无显著差异,但无论言语组如何,词汇量高于平均水平的儿童的词汇学习能力明显优于词汇量平均水平的儿童。在多元线性回归中,词汇是词汇学习能力差异的唯一显著预测因素。
患有语音障碍的儿童可能词汇量丰富,他们和没有语音障碍的儿童一样能够学习新单词。与预期相反,词汇知识而不是表达性语音能力解释了词汇学习能力的差异。这些发现质疑了语音障碍儿童的语音表征不完整的假设。它们还强调了语音障碍儿童之间的异质性,以及需要更好地了解他们学习语言语音系统的困难的性质。
这篇论文有何新意?
关于该主题已有的知识:关于语音障碍儿童词汇学习能力的研究有限。大多数先前的研究都集中在词的属性上,例如音位规则性和邻接密度。在现有的文献中,关于语音障碍儿童的词汇学习能力以及他们的词汇学习是否与言语正常儿童的词汇学习不同,存在不同的报告和结论。
本研究对现有知识的贡献:本研究发现,词汇是所有儿童词汇学习的最强预测因素。语音障碍儿童和无语音障碍儿童的词汇学习能力无显著差异。然而,词汇量丰富的儿童在词汇学习能力方面明显优于词汇量平均水平的儿童。
这项工作的潜在或实际临床意义:本研究的结果支持在与语音障碍儿童合作时评估和考虑词汇学习(包括词汇量)的重要性。本研究表明,使用故事并结合对词命名和故事复述命名的测量,有可能更深入地了解儿童的词汇学习能力。