Verbal repetition skill in language impaired children: Evidence of inefficient lexical processing?

Speeded verbal repetition of spoken words in simple and primed conditions was used to examine lexical processing deficits in children with specific language impairment (SLI). During simple verbal repetition, children with SLI (n=18) were slower at repeating abstract verbs compared to concrete verbs....

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Main Authors: Hennessey, Neville, Leitao, Suze, Mucciarone, Kate
Format: Journal Article
Published: Informa Healthcare 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/16455
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author Hennessey, Neville
Leitao, Suze
Mucciarone, Kate
author_facet Hennessey, Neville
Leitao, Suze
Mucciarone, Kate
author_sort Hennessey, Neville
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Speeded verbal repetition of spoken words in simple and primed conditions was used to examine lexical processing deficits in children with specific language impairment (SLI). During simple verbal repetition, children with SLI (n=18) were slower at repeating abstract verbs compared to concrete verbs. This same effect was not observed for nouns. Age matched typically developing (TD) children (n=18) showed no effect of concreteness for either verbs or nouns. During primed verbal repetition the children heard prime-target word pairs (e.g., lion-tiger) on each trial. Semantically related primes speeded verbal repetition for the TD but not SLI group, suggesting inefficient spreading activation within lexical semantics for children with SLI. Phonologically related primes (e.g., tiny) slowed verbal repetition of the target (e.g., tiger) in both groups, suggesting children with SLI were similar to their age-matched peers in lexical phonological competition. The results are generally supportive of graded deficits in lexical processing skill in SLI consistent with connectionist accounts, and approaches to therapy that combine semantic and phonological dimensions at the word level.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-164552018-12-14T00:49:25Z Verbal repetition skill in language impaired children: Evidence of inefficient lexical processing? Hennessey, Neville Leitao, Suze Mucciarone, Kate Speeded verbal repetition of spoken words in simple and primed conditions was used to examine lexical processing deficits in children with specific language impairment (SLI). During simple verbal repetition, children with SLI (n=18) were slower at repeating abstract verbs compared to concrete verbs. This same effect was not observed for nouns. Age matched typically developing (TD) children (n=18) showed no effect of concreteness for either verbs or nouns. During primed verbal repetition the children heard prime-target word pairs (e.g., lion-tiger) on each trial. Semantically related primes speeded verbal repetition for the TD but not SLI group, suggesting inefficient spreading activation within lexical semantics for children with SLI. Phonologically related primes (e.g., tiny) slowed verbal repetition of the target (e.g., tiger) in both groups, suggesting children with SLI were similar to their age-matched peers in lexical phonological competition. The results are generally supportive of graded deficits in lexical processing skill in SLI consistent with connectionist accounts, and approaches to therapy that combine semantic and phonological dimensions at the word level. 2010 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/16455 10.3109/17549500903431766 Informa Healthcare restricted
spellingShingle Hennessey, Neville
Leitao, Suze
Mucciarone, Kate
Verbal repetition skill in language impaired children: Evidence of inefficient lexical processing?
title Verbal repetition skill in language impaired children: Evidence of inefficient lexical processing?
title_full Verbal repetition skill in language impaired children: Evidence of inefficient lexical processing?
title_fullStr Verbal repetition skill in language impaired children: Evidence of inefficient lexical processing?
title_full_unstemmed Verbal repetition skill in language impaired children: Evidence of inefficient lexical processing?
title_short Verbal repetition skill in language impaired children: Evidence of inefficient lexical processing?
title_sort verbal repetition skill in language impaired children: evidence of inefficient lexical processing?
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/16455