Verb Use in Specific Language Impairment
- 1 December 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Speech Language Hearing Association in Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research
- Vol. 40 (6) , 1298-1313
- https://doi.org/10.1044/jslhr.4006.1298
Abstract
The aim of the present study was to use longitudinal data to provide a detailed profile of early word combinations by children with SLI. Three children with SLI were videotaped during mother-child interactions in the home over a 2-year period. The data obtained were compared to MLU-matched samples of normal language-learning children from Wells' (1981) longitudinal database, which provided a control for the linguistic measures used in this study. A range of analyses were carried out on controlled data samples in order to determine how the children with SLI's early utterances compared with those of MLU-matched normal language peers. The measures were specifically designed to assess the children's use of verbs and verb morphology because recent research has suggested that verbs may play a central role in the acquisition process, and children with SLI may have particular problems with verbs. We found that children with SLI used verbs less frequently, nouns more frequently, and were more input-dependent than their MLU-matched peers. The children with SLI used verb bare stems incorrectly more often than their MLU-matched counterparts. However, further analyses showed that this high frequency of incorrect bare stems may be at least partly due to the fact that children with SLI have particular difficulties using auxiliaries. Furthermore, the proportion of verb use that consisted of General All Purpose (GAP) verbs for children with SLI was similar to that of the MLU-matched children. The above findings were compared with those from other relevant studies of lexical diversity in children with SLI, and the potential implications of these data for theories of SLI language development were discussed, particularly with reference to Marchman and Bates' (1994) "critical mass" hypothesis.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Contingency and Breakdown: Children With SLI and Their Conversations With Mothers and FathersJournal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 1995
- A cross-linguistic study of early lexical developmentCognitive Development, 1995
- Developmental and stylistic variation in the composition of early vocabularyJournal of Child Language, 1994
- The Underlying Nature of Specific Language ImpairmentJournal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 1992
- Characteristics of children with specific language impairment attending language unitsInternational Journal of Language & Communication Disorders, 1992
- Mother‐child interactions with language‐impaired children and their siblingsInternational Journal of Language & Communication Disorders, 1991
- Do linguistic differences lead to cognitive differences? A cross-linguistic study of semantic and cognitive developmentFirst Language, 1990
- Maternal Recasts and Other Contingent Replies to Language-Impaired ChildrenJournal of Speech and Hearing Disorders, 1990
- Characterizing language impairment in childrenLanguage Testing, 1984
- A First LanguagePublished by Harvard University Press ,1973