Bishop D V
MRC Applied Psychology Unit, Cambridge, U.K.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 1994 Oct 29;346(1315):105-11. doi: 10.1098/rstb.1994.0134.
Specific language impairment (SLI) is diagnosed when a child fails to develop language normally for no apparent reason: hearing and intelligence are adequate and the social environment is unexceptional. Definitions of SLI typically specify that the child must have a substantial discrepancy between language ability and non-verbal IQ. However, data from a twin study question the validity of this requirement, and indicate that SLI is not genetically distinct from less specific disorders where language impairment occurs in the context of low average or borderline non-verbal ability. A second question concerns the heterogeneous language symptoms seen in SLI: do these correspond to distinct conditions, or to different phenotypic manifestations of a common underlying disorder, or are they merely random variations resulting from unreliable assessments? The last of these possibilities is ruled out by the finding that twins who are concordant for language disorder show good agreement in terms of the pattern of language impairment. However, systematic variation in the age and ability of children in different SLI subgroups suggest that these may correspond to variable manifestations of a core inherited language disorder, rather than distinct diagnostic entities.
特定语言障碍(SLI)是指儿童在没有明显原因的情况下未能正常发展语言能力:听力和智力正常,社会环境也无异常。SLI的定义通常规定,儿童的语言能力与非语言智商之间必须存在显著差异。然而,一项双胞胎研究的数据对这一要求的有效性提出了质疑,并表明SLI与在平均非语言能力较低或临界情况下出现语言障碍的不太特定的障碍在遗传上并无区别。第二个问题涉及SLI中出现的异质性语言症状:这些症状是对应于不同的病症,还是共同潜在疾病的不同表型表现,或者它们仅仅是由不可靠评估导致的随机变异?双胞胎在语言障碍方面一致的研究结果排除了最后一种可能性。然而,不同SLI亚组中儿童年龄和能力的系统差异表明,这些可能对应于核心遗传性语言障碍的可变表现,而不是不同的诊断实体。