母亲的言语与正常和唐氏综合症儿童的平均话语长度相匹配。

J A Rondal
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引用次数: 0

摘要

该研究旨在通过儿童的平均话语长度(MLU)来评估正常和唐氏综合症儿童在三个语言发展水平上的母亲语言环境数据。三个MLU水平分别为1.00—1.50、1.75—2.25和2.50—3.00。研究对象为21名唐氏综合症儿童及其生母和21名正常儿童及其生母。正常儿童的年龄从20到32个月不等,唐氏综合症儿童的年龄从3到12岁不等。在家里自由玩耍的情况下,母亲和孩子之间一小时的语言互动被录下来。本文从数字、词汇、句法、语义结构、语义语用和语言教学等20个方面对母亲的言语输出进行了分析。此外,计算了与输出数字、词汇、句法、语义结构和母亲言语模仿性相关的八项儿童言语测量,作为测试多语组匹配有效性的手段,为本研究奠定了基础。除了Type-token比值对唐氏综合征患儿有利外,正常患儿与唐氏综合征患儿无显著差异。相比之下,根据语言水平的不同,孩子们在语言的不同方面存在着许多差异。将母亲的语言水平与正常儿童和患有唐氏综合症的儿童进行比较后发现,三名儿童的语言水平没有任何差异。由此可见,语言学习型唐氏综合征患儿的母亲语言环境与相应的MLU正常患儿的母亲语言环境在大多数方面是相似的。相比之下,母亲的言语根据孩子的语言水平有很多不同。这证实了孩子的表达语言水平是影响母亲言语的一个更强大的因素,而不是他们是正常的还是唐氏综合症的孩子。这些发现的意义与唐氏综合症儿童语言发展中的延迟差异问题以及对母亲语言输入对唐氏综合症儿童语言发展和语言增强干预计划的影响的各种解释有关。
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Maternal speech to normal and Down's syndrome children matched for mean length of utterance.

The study was designed to provide data on the maternal linguistic environments of normal and Down's syndrome children at three levels of language development, as assessed by children's mean length of utterances (MLU). The three MLU levels were 1.00--1.50, 1.75--2.25, and 2.50--3.00, respectively. The subjects were 21 Down's syndrome children and their natural mothers and 21 normal children and their natural mothers. Normal children ranged in chronological age from 20 to 32 months and Down's syndrome children from 3 to 12 years. A one-hour verbal interaction between mother and child was tape recorded at home in a free-play situation. Maternal speech was analyzed using 20 measures related to its output-numerical, lexical, syntactical, semantic-structural, semantic-pragmatic, and language-teaching aspects. Additionally, eight measures of children's speech related to the output-numerical, lexical, syntactical semantic-structural aspects, and to imitativeness of maternal speech were computed as a means of testing the validity of the MLU-matching that forms a basis for this study. Except for the Type-token ratio, which favored Down's syndrome children, normal and Down's syndrome children were not found to differ. In contrast, there were numerous differences between the children in the different aspects of speech considered according to language level. None of the comparisons made of mother's speech to normal and to Down's syndrome children led to differences for any of the three children's language levels studied. It appeared that the maternal linguistic environments of language-learning Down's syndrome and normal children of corresponding MLU were similar in most respects. In contrast, there were numerous differences in mother's speech according to the language level of the children addressed. This confirmed that the expressive language level of the children is a far more powerful factor in influencing maternal speech than whether they are normal or Down's syndrome children. The implications of these findings were related to the delay-difference question in the language development of Down's syndrome children and to various interpretations of the effects of maternal linguistic input for language development and for intervention programs of language enhancement in the Down's syndrome child.

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