Affiliation:
1. Department of Otorhinolaryngology and Phoniatrics—Head and Neck Surgery, Helsinki University Hospital and University of Helsinki, Finland
2. Department of Psychology and Logopedics, Faculty of Medicine, University of Helsinki, Finland
3. Research Unit of Logopedics, University of Oulu, Finland
4. Department of Logopedics, School of Humanities, Philosophical Faculty, University of Eastern Finland, Finland
Abstract
Purpose
Developmental language disorder (DLD) is defined by persistent difficulties with language, but a growing body of evidence suggests that it is also associated with domain-general and nonverbal information-processing deficits. However, the interconnections between cognitive functions, both nonverbal and language related, are still unclear. With the aim of gaining more comprehensive insight into the cognitive deficits related to DLD, we investigated and compared the cognitive structure of children with DLD and typically developing (TD) children.
Method
As a part of the Helsinki longitudinal SLI study, monolingual Finnish preschoolers (
N
= 154; TD group:
n
= 66, DLD group:
n
= 88) were assessed with 23 tasks measuring nonverbal and verbal reasoning, language processing, memory, visuomotor functions, attention, and social cognition. Exploratory factor analysis and structural equation modeling were performed to examine latent constructs and to test measurement invariance between the TD and DLD groups.
Results
Measurement invariance was not found across the TD and DLD groups. Best fitting structure for TD children included factors reflecting verbal abilities, processing speed/short-term memory, visuomotor functions, and visuoconstructive abilities/nonverbal reasoning. The DLD group's structure comprised nonverbal abilities, naming/expressive language, verbal comprehension, and verbal/declarative memory.
Conclusions
The findings suggest that the structure of cognitive functions differs in TD children and children with DLD already at preschool age. Nonverbal functions seem more unified, whereas verbal functions seem more varying in preschoolers with DLD compared to TD children. The results can be used in future research for prognosis of DLD and planning interventions.
Publisher
American Speech Language Hearing Association
Subject
Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
6 articles.
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