Spontaneously generated narratives of children treated for posterior fossa tumour
- 1 November 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Aphasiology
- Vol. 6 (6) , 549-566
- https://doi.org/10.1080/02687039208249491
Abstract
Sixteen children who had undergone treatment for posterior fossa tumour and 16 age-and sex-matched controls spontaneously generated a narrative in response to a character figurine. Narratives were analysed for story grammar composition, cohesion and developmental level. Although, as a group, the children treated for tumour performed significantly below the controls on a standardized language test, they produced narratives that were similar to those of their controls. Cohesive adequacy was the only narrative feature which revealed a significant difference in performance between subject and control groups. The children treated for tumour evidenced a higher percentage of erroneous cohesive ties in their narratives than did the controls, while the controls produced more complete cohesive ties than did the tumour subjects.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Acquired aphasia in childhood: Case studies of five childrenAphasiology, 1990
- Linguistic deficits after closed head injury: A current appraisalAphasiology, 1990
- Oral Narrative Performance of Normal and Language Impaired School Aged ChildrenAustralian Journal of Human Communication Disorders, 1989
- Posterior fossa tumours in childhood: Associated speech and language disorders post-surgeryAphasiology, 1989
- Long-term speech and language disorders subsequent to closed head injury in childrenBrain Injury, 1988
- Children with a History of Acquired AphasiaJournal of Speech and Hearing Disorders, 1987
- Story grammar skills in school-age childrenTopics in Language Disorders, 1985
- Enhancing Children's Reading Comprehension through Instruction in Narrative StructureJournal of Reading Behavior, 1983
- Language deficits after apparent clinical recovery from childhood aphasiaAnnals of Neurology, 1979
- The development of structural complexity in children's fantasy narratives.Developmental Psychology, 1977