Yoo Hyunsoo
Department of Communication Science and Disorders, Baylor University, 1311 S 5th St, Waco, TX, 76706, United States, 1 (800) 229-5678.
JMIR Hum Factors. 2025 Aug 5;12:e71303. doi: 10.2196/71303.
The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic has primarily been studied in the context of language delays or developmental disorders in infants and children. However, the effects on young adults have received less attention. COVID-19 not only affects physical health but also cognitive and language functions, which is an emerging area of research. While previous studies have focused on developmental stages, the effects of COVID-19 on the language abilities of healthy young adults remain underexplored. This study aimed to investigate the impact of COVID-19 on the spoken language, particularly in story retelling and working memory, in young adults.
This study aimed to investigate the effects of COVID-19 on memory-based story retelling and verbal working memory in young adults. Specifically, it examined whether there were group differences in story retelling and working memory performance between individuals with and those without a history of COVID-19, and whether verbal working memory predicted story retelling outcomes.
The study involved 79 young adult participants, of whom 39 were in the non-COVID-19 group and 40 were in the COVID-19 group. Participants completed the Story Retelling Procedure (SRP) and a verbal working memory task. Story retelling performance was quantified using information units per minute (IUs/min), a measure of informativeness in story retelling. Working memory was assessed using the Alphabet Span Test.
Participants with COVID-19 produced fewer information units per minute (mean 0.53, SD 0.21) than those without COVID-19 (mean 0.63, SD 0.24; P=.049). No significant group differences were found in verbal working memory performance (P=.20). However, regression analysis showed that verbal working memory significantly predicted story retelling performance (R²=.064, P=.02), suggesting that individual differences in working memory capacity may contribute to discourse informativeness, regardless of COVID-19 history.
Young adults with a history of COVID-19 exhibited reduced story retelling performance compared to those without a history of infection. In contrast, no significant differences were observed in verbal working memory performance between groups. Furthermore, verbal working memory scores significantly predicted story retelling performance, suggesting a functional link between these cognitive-linguistic domains. These findings suggest that story retelling performance may serve as a sensitive indicator of post-COVID-19 cognitive-linguistic changes in young adults.
新冠疫情的影响主要是在婴幼儿和儿童语言发育迟缓或发育障碍的背景下进行研究的。然而,其对年轻人的影响却较少受到关注。新冠病毒不仅影响身体健康,还影响认知和语言功能,这是一个新兴的研究领域。虽然先前的研究集中在发育阶段,但新冠病毒对健康年轻人语言能力的影响仍未得到充分探索。本研究旨在调查新冠病毒对年轻人口语的影响,特别是在故事复述和工作记忆方面。
本研究旨在调查新冠病毒对年轻人基于记忆的故事复述和言语工作记忆的影响。具体而言,研究了有新冠病史和无新冠病史的个体在故事复述和工作记忆表现上是否存在组间差异,以及言语工作记忆是否能预测故事复述结果。
该研究纳入了79名年轻成人参与者,其中39人在非新冠组,40人在新冠组。参与者完成了故事复述程序(SRP)和一项言语工作记忆任务。故事复述表现通过每分钟信息单元(IUs/min)进行量化,这是衡量故事复述信息量的一个指标。工作记忆通过字母广度测试进行评估。
有新冠病史的参与者每分钟产生的信息单元(平均0.53,标准差0.21)少于无新冠病史的参与者(平均0.63,标准差0.24;P = 0.049)。在言语工作记忆表现上未发现显著的组间差异(P = 0.20)。然而,回归分析表明言语工作记忆显著预测了故事复述表现(R² = 0.064,P = 0.02),这表明无论有无新冠病史,工作记忆容量的个体差异可能有助于话语信息量。
有新冠病史的年轻人与无感染史的年轻人相比,故事复述表现有所下降。相比之下,两组在言语工作记忆表现上未观察到显著差异。此外,言语工作记忆分数显著预测了故事复述表现,表明这些认知 - 语言领域之间存在功能联系。这些发现表明,故事复述表现可能是年轻人新冠后认知 - 语言变化的一个敏感指标。