Rate of speech affects the comprehension of pronouns in children with developmental language disorder.

Frontiers in language sciences Pub Date : 2024-01-01 Epub Date: 2024-08-26 DOI:10.3389/flang.2024.1394742
Noelle Abbott, Ignatius Nip, Tracy Love
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Abstract

This study examined whether children with Developmental Language Disorder (DLD) have knowledge of binding principles (i.e., linking pronouns to their structurally licensed antecedent) during real-time sentence processing (cross-modal priming, real-time) and overt comprehension (sentence-picture matching, interpretative) and whether rate of speech impacted access to that knowledge. Fourteen children with DLD participated in two experiments, with sentences presented auditorily at either a regular or slow speech rate. Sentences were matched except to contain a pronoun, reflexive, or noun phrase (control) in the same syntactic position. Experiment (1) used a cross-modal picture priming paradigm to test real-time pronoun-antecedent linking abilities at both rates of speech. Children were instructed to make a binary decision during the uninterrupted auditory presentation of a sentence to a visually presented image (of the antecedent) at the offset of a pronoun, a reflexive, or a control noun. Response times between conditions (e.g., pronoun vs. control noun) were compared to determine whether participants showed evidence of facilitative priming (faster response times in the pronoun than control noun condition) at either speech rate. Experiment (2) used an auditory sentence-picture-matching task to test final comprehension of similar sentences containing a pronoun or reflexive. Accuracy was compared across both speech rates. For Experiment (1), children with DLD did not show evidence of real-time pronoun-antecedent priming at the regular speech rate. However, when sentences were slowed, they showed facilitative priming for the pronoun condition. For experiment (2), children with DLD performed at-chance when interpreting sentences with pronouns regardless of speech rate. While children with DLD have been shown to have difficulty processing sentences containing anaphors (such as pronouns), results suggest that this is not due to loss of intrinsic knowledge of binding principles. By slowing the rate of speech input, we showed that children with DLD do have access to that knowledge and can make the correct link during real-time processing between a pronoun and its structurally licensed antecedent (Experiment 1) but need more time to do so. However, the effect of slowed speech input does not extend to final comprehension (Experiment 2).

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语速影响发育性语言障碍儿童对代词的理解。
本研究考察了发育性语言障碍(DLD)儿童在实时句子处理(跨模态引物,实时)和显性理解(句子-图片匹配,解释性)过程中是否掌握了结合原则(即将代词与其结构许可的先行词联系起来)的知识,以及语速是否会影响这些知识的获取。14 名患有发育迟缓症的儿童参加了两项实验,以正常或缓慢的语速听辨句子。除了在相同的句法位置包含代词、反身词或名词短语(对照组)外,其他句子都是匹配的。实验(1)使用了跨模态图片引物范式来测试两种语速下的实时代词-前置词连接能力。在不间断的句子听觉呈现过程中,儿童被要求在代词、反身名词或控制名词的偏移处对视觉呈现的图像(前件)做出二元决定。通过比较不同条件下的反应时间(如代词与对照名词),以确定参与者在任一语速下是否表现出促进性引物(代词条件下的反应时间快于对照名词条件下的反应时间)。实验(2)使用听觉句子-图片匹配任务来测试对包含代词或反义词的相似句子的最终理解能力。比较了两种语速下的准确性。在实验(1)中,在正常语速下,患有 DLD 的儿童没有表现出实时的代词-反义词引物。然而,当句子语速放慢时,他们对代词条件表现出了促进性引物。在实验(2)中,无论语速如何,在解释带有代词的句子时,患有 DLD 的儿童都表现出了偶然性。虽然有研究表明,患有 DLD 的儿童在处理含有拟词(如代词)的句子时会遇到困难,但实验结果表明,这并不是因为他们丧失了对结合原则的内在知识。通过减慢语音输入的速度,我们发现患有 DLD 的儿童确实能够获得这种知识,并能在实时处理过程中在代词与其结构许可的前置词之间建立正确的联系(实验 1),但需要更多的时间才能做到这一点。然而,语音输入速度减慢的影响并没有延伸到最终的理解上(实验 2)。
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Rate of speech affects the comprehension of pronouns in children with developmental language disorder.
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