Affiliation:
1. Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences, The University of Arizona, Tucson
Abstract
Purpose:
Our goal was to compare statistical learning abilities between preschoolers with developmental language disorder (DLD) and peers with typical development (TD) by assessing their learning of two artificial grammars.
Method:
Four- and 5-year-olds with and without DLD were compared on their statistical learning ability using two artificial grammars. After learning an
aX
grammar, participants learned a relatively more complex
abX
grammar with a nonadjacent relationship between
a
and
X
. Participants were tested on their generalization of the grammatical pattern to new sequences with novel
X
elements that conformed to (
aX, abX
) or violated (
Xa, baX
) the grammars.
Results:
Results revealed an interaction between age and language group. Four-year-olds with and without DLD performed equivalently on the
aX
and
abX
grammar tests, and neither of the 4-year-old groups' accuracy scores exceeded chance. In contrast, among 5-year-olds, TD participants scored significantly higher on
aX
tests compared to participants with DLD, but the groups'
abX
scores did not differ. Five-year-old participants with DLD did not exceed chance on any test, whereas 5-year-old TD participants' scores exceeded chance on all grammar learning outcomes. Regression analyses indicated that
aX
performance positively predicted learning outcomes on the subsequent
abX
grammar for TD participants.
Conclusion:
These results indicate that preschool-age participants with DLD show deficits relative to typical peers in statistical learning, but group differences vary with participant age and type of grammatical structure being tested.
Supplemental Material:
https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.26487376
Publisher
American Speech Language Hearing Association