Spitz R V, Tallal P, Flax J, Benasich A A
Center for Molecular and Behavior Neuroscience, Rutgers University, Newark, NJ, USA.
J Speech Lang Hear Res. 1997 Oct;40(5):990-1001. doi: 10.1044/jslhr.4005.990.
Language impairments have been hypothesized to have a genetic component. Previous studies of the familial aggregation of language impairments have relied on a retrospective approach based on parental/self-reported history of language development. This study examined familial aggregation prospectively, by investigating language acquisition and cognitive development in the younger siblings and offspring of individuals with well-defined language impairments. It was predicted that children with a positive family history for language impairments would be more likely to show delays in language acquisition than would age- and gender-matched controls. Similar delays were not expected in nonlinguistic domains, such as conceptual, gestural, or general cognitive development. Ten children with a positive family history and 10 age- and gender-matched controls were tested. Analyses of linguistic and cognitive assessments at 16 to 26 months confirmed the predictions. Children with a family history of language impairments had lower receptive and expressive language scores than controls, with 50% of them scoring at least 1.5 SD below the mean for their age. At the same time, performance on a number of tasks that did not rely on language abilities did not differ as a function of family history. These results indicate that children with a positive family history for language impairments are at risk for language delay; the results also support a familial component to language impairments.
语言障碍被认为有遗传因素。先前关于语言障碍家族聚集性的研究依赖于基于父母/自我报告的语言发展病史的回顾性方法。本研究通过调查有明确语言障碍个体的弟弟妹妹及后代的语言习得和认知发展,前瞻性地研究了家族聚集性。预计有语言障碍家族史的儿童比年龄和性别匹配的对照组更有可能出现语言习得延迟。在非语言领域,如概念、手势或一般认知发展方面,预计不会出现类似的延迟。对10名有阳性家族史的儿童和10名年龄和性别匹配的对照组进行了测试。对16至26个月时的语言和认知评估分析证实了这些预测。有语言障碍家族史的儿童的接受性和表达性语言得分低于对照组,其中50%的儿童得分至少比其年龄组平均水平低1.5个标准差。同时,在一些不依赖语言能力的任务上的表现并没有因家族史而有所不同。这些结果表明,有语言障碍阳性家族史的儿童有语言延迟的风险;这些结果也支持语言障碍存在家族因素。