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2009 | 45 | 2 | 211-221

Article title

Differences Between Grammatical and Lexical Development in Japanese Specific Language Impairment: A Case Study

Selected contents from this journal

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
Paradis and Gopnik (1997) and Fukuda and Fukuda (2001a, b) suggested that the performance of children with specific language impairment (SLI) could be explained by deficits in their knowledge of grammar, whereas their lexicon appears to be intact. The purpose of this study was to examine this hypothesis with longitudinal data from a Japanese child with SLI from the ages of 9 to 14. Tests with tense, passives, case-marking, demonstrative pronouns and vocabulary were administered during this period. The results were as follows. The participant's lexical age developed rapidly. In contrast, the percent correct of her passives did not increase significantly from the ages of 9 to 14. Moreover, the percent correct on tense was 50% at the age of 14 when non-words were used. In case-marker production with passives, it was 50% even at the age of 14 when reversed word order was used. However, the percent correct of demonstrative pronouns was 50% at the age of 11, and it increased rapidly to 100% within a year. The results of this study provide further empirical support for the hypothesis that the deficit in children with SLI can be attributed to an impairment in their grammatical knowledge which seems to spare their lexicon.

Publisher

Year

Volume

45

Issue

2

Pages

211-221

Physical description

Dates

published
2009-06-01
online
2009-06-25

Contributors

author
  • Tokyo Gakugei University
author
  • University of Hokkaido
author
  • Aoyama Gakuin University

References

  • Clahsen, H. 1991. Child language and developmental dysphasia. Linguistic studies of the acquisition of German. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
  • Fukuda, S.E. and S. Fukuda. 1999. "Specific language impairment in Japanese: A linguistic investigation". NUCB Journal of Language, Culture and Communication 1. 1-25.
  • Fukuda, S. and S.E. Fukuda. 2001a. "The acquisition of complex predicates in Japanese specifically language-impaired and normally developing children". Brain and Language 77. 305-320.[Crossref]
  • Fukuda, S. and S.E. Fukuda. 2001b. "An asymmetrical impairment in Japanese complex verbs in specific language impairment". Cognitive Studies 8. 63-84.
  • Fukuda, S., S.E. Fukuda, T. Ito and Y. Yamaguchi. 2007. "Grammatical impairment of case assignment in Japanese children with specific language impairment (in Japanese)". The Japan Journal of Logopedics and Phoniatrics 48. 95-104.
  • Gopnik, M. 1994. "Impairment of tense in a familial language disorder". Journal of Neurolinguistics 8. 109-133.[Crossref]
  • Gopnik, M. and H. Goad. 1997. "What underlies inflectional error patterns in dysphasia?" Journal of Neurolinguistics 10. 109-137.[Crossref]
  • Marshall, C.R. and H.K.J. van der Lely. 2007. "The impact of phonological complexity on past tense inflection in children with Grammatical-SLI". Advances in Speech-Language Pathology 9. 191-203.
  • Paradis, M. and M. Gopnik. 1997. "Compensatory strategies in genetic dysphasia: Declarative memory". Journal of Neurolinguistics 10. 173-185.[Crossref]
  • Piggott, G.L. and R.M. Kessler. 1999. "Prosodic features of familial language impairment: constraints on stress assignment". Folia Phoniatrica et Logopaedica 51. 55-69.
  • Rice, M.L., K. Wexler and P. Cleave. 1995. "Specific language impairment as a period of extended optional infinitive". Journal of Speech and Hearing Research 38. 850-863.
  • Tallal, P., J. Townsend, S. Curtiss and B. Wulfeck. 1991. "Phenotypic profiles of language-impaired children based on genetic/family history". Brain and Language 41. 81-95.
  • Ullman, M. and M. Gopnik. 1994. "The production of inflectional morphology in hereditary specific language impairment". McGill Working Papers in Linguistics 10. (Special issue on linguistic aspects of familial language impairment.) 81-118.
  • van der Lely, H.K.J. 1994. "Canonical linking rules: forward vs. reverse linking in normally developing and specifically language impaired children". Cognition 51. 29-72.
  • van der Lely, H.K.J. 1997. "Language and cognitive development in a grammatical SLI boy: Modularity and innateness". Journal of Neurolinguistics 10. 75-107.
  • van der Lely, H.K.J. 2005a. "Grammatical-Specific Language Impairment (G-SLI): Identifying and characterising the G-SLI subgroup". Trouble Primaire du Langage/Dysphasie 17. 13-20.
  • van der Lely, H.K.J. 2005b. "Domain-specific cognitive systems: insight from Grammatical-SLI". Trends in Cognitive Sciences 9. 53-59.

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.doi-10_2478_v10010-009-0005-7
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