Children with specific impairment often show an especially serious limitation in the use of """"""""grammatical morphemes."""""""" These difficulties include problems with bound morphemes such as the past tense and third person singular inflections, and function words such as articles and auxiliaries. The purpose of this project is to explore the possible bases of these grammatical morpheme limitations, and to examine how such limitations may hinder other aspects of these children's language development. To accomplish this general goal, specifically-language-impaired (SLI) children's comprehensive and use of grammatical morphemes will be examined across three different languages (English, Hebrew, Italian) within the framework of a comprehensive theory of language learnability. Experiments 1 and 2 center on SLI children's comprehension and use of morphemes that are low in """"""""phonetic substance,"""""""" that is, morphemes that are nonsyllabic consonant segments or unstressed syllables. The focus of Experiment 3 is whether low-phonetic-substance morphemes are especially difficult for SLI children because these children have problems discriminating linguistic material that is not perceptually salient. The final experiment explores the hypothesis that SLI children learn other aspects of language more slowly in part because they are unable to rely on low-phonetic- substance morphemes as parsing aids when presented with new linguistic material.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01DC000458-05
Application #
3216929
Study Section
Sensory Disorders and Language Study Section (CMS)
Project Start
1988-04-01
Project End
1993-05-31
Budget Start
1992-04-01
Budget End
1993-05-31
Support Year
5
Fiscal Year
1992
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Purdue University
Department
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
072051394
City
West Lafayette
State
IN
Country
United States
Zip Code
47907
Fey, Marc E; Leonard, Laurence B; Bredin-Oja, Shelley L et al. (2017) A Clinical Evaluation of the Competing Sources of Input Hypothesis. J Speech Lang Hear Res 60:104-120
Krok, Windi C; Leonard, Laurence B (2015) Past Tense Production in Children With and Without Specific Language Impairment Across Germanic Languages: A Meta-Analysis. J Speech Lang Hear Res 58:1326-40
Leonard, Laurence B (2015) Time-related grammatical use by children with SLI across languages: Beyond tense. Int J Speech Lang Pathol 17:545-555
Kunnari, Sari; Savinainen-Makkonen, Tuula; Leonard, Laurence B et al. (2014) The use of negative inflections by Finnish-speaking children with and without specific language impairment. Clin Linguist Phon 28:697-708
Leonard, Laurence B; Kunnari, Sari; Savinainen-Makkonen, Tuula et al. (2014) Noun Case Suffix Use by Children with Specific Language Impairment: An Examination of Finnish. Appl Psycholinguist 35:833-854
Leonard, Laurence B (2014) Specific Language Impairment Across Languages. Child Dev Perspect 8:1-5
Leonard, Laurence B (2014) Children with specific language impairment and their contribution to the study of language development. J Child Lang 41 Suppl 1:38-47
Souto, SofĂ­a M; Leonard, Laurence B; Deevy, Patricia (2014) Identifying risk for specific language impairment with narrow and global measures of grammar. Clin Linguist Phon 28:741-56
Leonard, Laurence B; Dispaldro, Marco (2013) The effects of production demands on grammatical weaknesses in specific language impairment: the case of clitic pronouns in Italian. J Speech Lang Hear Res 56:1272-86
Dispaldro, Marco; Leonard, Laurence B; Deevy, Patricia (2013) Real-word and nonword repetition in Italian-speaking children with specific language impairment: a study of diagnostic accuracy. J Speech Lang Hear Res 56:323-36

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