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1.
J Commun Disord ; 67: 35-48, 2017 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28544920

ABSTRACT

For children with sensorineural hearing loss the ability to understand wh-questions might be particularly challenging because they often have only restricted access to spoken language input during optimal periods of language acquisition. In previous research it has been suggested that this restricted input during critical stages in language acquisition might lead to syntactic deficits that persist into adolescence. In this study we want to pursue this issue by investigating the comprehension of wh-questions in German children with bilateral sensorineural hearing loss. We report results of a who-question comprehension task in a group of 21 3- to 4-year-old German hard-of-hearing children compared to a group of age-matched children with normal hearing. The group data and individual performance patterns suggest that the syntactic comprehension difficulties observed in some, but not all, of the children with hearing loss reflect a delay in the acquisition of who-question comprehension rather than a persistent syntactic deficit. Follow-up data elicited from a subgroup of children confirm this supposition.


Subject(s)
Comprehension/physiology , Hearing Loss, Sensorineural/psychology , Language Development , Child, Preschool , Female , Germany , Humans , Male , Persons With Hearing Impairments/psychology
2.
Logoped Phoniatr Vocol ; 41(1): 9-26, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25175166

ABSTRACT

Despite modern hearing aids, children with hearing impairment often have only restricted access to spoken language input during the 'critical' years for language acquisition. Specifically, a sensorineural hearing impairment affects the perception of voiceless coronal consonants which realize verbal affixes in German. The aim of this study is to explore if German hearing-impaired children have problems in producing and/or acquiring inflectional suffixes expressed by such phonemes. The findings of two experiments (an elicitation task and a picture-naming task) conducted with a group of hearing-impaired monolingual German children (age 3-4 years) demonstrate that difficulties in perceiving specific phonemes relate to the avoidance of these same sounds in speech production independent of the grammatical function these phonemes have.


Subject(s)
Child Language , Disabled Children/psychology , Hearing Loss, Sensorineural/psychology , Persons With Hearing Impairments/psychology , Phonetics , Speech Acoustics , Speech Perception , Voice Quality , Age Factors , Case-Control Studies , Child Behavior , Child, Preschool , Female , Germany , Hearing Loss, Sensorineural/diagnosis , Humans , Male , Speech Production Measurement , Verbal Behavior , Vocabulary
3.
Clin Linguist Phon ; 28(9): 709-21, 2014 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24588469

ABSTRACT

This study investigates verbal morphology in Specific Language Impairment (SLI) in German, focusing on past participle inflection. Longitudinal data from 12 German-speaking children with SLI, six monolingual and six Turkish-German sequential bilingual children, were examined, plus an additional group of six typically developing Turkish-German sequential bilingual children. In a recent study (Rothweiler, M., Chilla, S., & H. Clahsen. (2012). Subject verb agreement in Specific Language Impairment: A study of monolingual and bilingual German-speaking children. Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 15, 39-57), the same children with SLI were found to be severely impaired in reliably producing correct agreement-marked verb forms. By contrast, the new results reported in this study show that both the monolingual and the bilingual children with SLI produce participle inflection according to their language age. Our results strengthen the case of difficulties with agreement as a linguistic marker of SLI in German and show that it is possible to identify SLI from an early sequential bilingual child's performance in one of her two languages.


Subject(s)
Language Development Disorders/diagnosis , Multilingualism , Phonetics , Semantics , Speech Acoustics , Age Factors , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Germany , Humans , Linguistics , Male , Reference Values , Speech Production Measurement , Turkey/ethnology
4.
Logoped Phoniatr Vocol ; 37(2): 83-93, 2012 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22432566

ABSTRACT

Many hard-of-hearing children show delays or disorders in the acquisition of morphology and syntax. There is an on-going discussion how these difficulties are connected to problems in the auditory domain. The article focuses on coronal consonants that function as suffixes in the German verbal inflectional system. Here we present a new test we developed to evaluate the ability to discriminate these consonants in syllabic offset positions. A pilot study with 22 hearing-impaired (HI) children and 15 typically developing (TD) children reveals significantly lower discrimination scores in the HI group. The results highlight the necessity to measure the capacity to distinguish particular phonemes at specific syllable positions, when considering the impact of a hearing impairment on language acquisition.


Subject(s)
Audiometry, Speech , Child Language , Hearing Loss/diagnosis , Language , Persons With Hearing Impairments/psychology , Speech Perception , Age Factors , Case-Control Studies , Child, Preschool , Discrimination, Psychological , Female , Germany , Hearing Loss/psychology , Humans , Intelligence Tests , Male , Pilot Projects , Predictive Value of Tests , Psychoacoustics , Severity of Illness Index , Speech Acoustics , Speech Intelligibility , Video Recording
5.
Clin Linguist Phon ; 24(7): 540-55, 2010 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20144076

ABSTRACT

Language disorders, and Specific Language Impairment (SLI), have been extensively studied in a number of different, though thus far almost exclusively Indoeuropean, languages. For other languages such as Turkish, Vietnamese, or Arabic, however, findings on the outcome of SLI are rare. In this context, the growing number of migrant children in European countries with a variety of first languages can be seen as a challenge to linguistics and to language assessment: The lack of empirical findings on SLI in these languages brings up the question of how the impairment is manifested in bilingual children with a migrant background. In order for a language disorder to correctly be labelled SLI, it needs to be identified in both languages. This paper presents findings from a study examining the grammatical features of Turkish first language acquisition in Germany, while focusing on Turkish case morphology. For this purpose, it compares the data of three typically-developing children and two children with deviant language development. Moreover, it presents a first interpretation of the outcome of grammatical SLI in bilingual Turkish children and discusses suggestions for diagnostic assessment procedures.


Subject(s)
Language Development Disorders/diagnosis , Language , Linguistics , Multilingualism , Child , Child Language , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Male , Speech , Transients and Migrants
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