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41
Lower verbalizability of visual stimuli modulates differences in estimates of working memory capacity between children with and without developmental language disorders
In: ISSN: 2396-9415 ; Autism & Developmental Language Impairments ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02929714 ; Autism & Developmental Language Impairments, 2020, 5, pp.239694152094551. ⟨10.1177/2396941520945519⟩ (2020)
Abstract: International audience ; Background and aims: Children with developmental language disorder (DLD) often perform below their typically developing peers on verbal memory tasks. However, the picture is less clear on visual memory tasks. Research has generally shown that visual memory can be facilitated by verbal representations, but few studies have been conducted using visual materials that are not easy to verbalize. Therefore, we attempted to construct non-verbalizable stimuli to investigate the impact of working memory capacity. Method and results: We manipulated verbalizability in visual span tasks and tested whether minimizing verbalizability could help reduce visual recall performance differences across children with and without developmental language disorder. Visuals that could be easily verbalized or not were selected based on a pretest with non-developmental language disorder young adults. We tested groups of children with developmental language disorder (N ¼ 23) and their typically developing peers (N ¼ 65) using these high and low verbalizable classes of visual stimuli. The memory span of the children with developmental language disorder varied across the different stimulus conditions, but critically, although their storage capacity for visual information was virtually unimpaired, the children with developmental language disorder still had difficulty in recalling verbalizable images with simple drawings. Also, recalling complex (galaxy) images with low verbalizability proved difficult in both groups of children. An item-based analysis on correctly recalled items showed that higher levels of verbalizability enhanced visual recall in the typically developing children to a greater extent than the children with developmental language disorder. Conclusions and clinical implication: We suggest that visual short-term memory in typically developing children might be mediated with verbal encoding to a larger extent than in children with developmental language disorder, thus leading to poorer performance on visual capacity tasks. Our findings cast doubts on the idea that short-term storage impairments are limited to the verbal domain, but they also challenge the idea that visual tasks are essentially visual. Therefore, our findings suggest to clinicians working with children experiencing developmental language difficulties that visual memory deficits may not necessarily be due to reduced non-verbal skills but may be due to the high amount of verbal cues in visual stimuli, from which they do not benefit in comparison to their peers.
Keyword: [SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/Psychology; Developmental language disorder; verbal encoding; visuo-spatial memory
URL: https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02929714
https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02929714/file/Arslan-Broc-Mathy-2020.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1177/2396941520945519
https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02929714/document
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42
Screen time in 36-month-olds at increased likelihood for ASD and ADHD.
Hill, Monique Moore; Gangi, Devon; Miller, Meghan. - : eScholarship, University of California, 2020
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43
Screen time in 36-month-olds at increased likelihood for ASD and ADHD.
Hill, Monique Moore; Gangi, Devon; Miller, Meghan. - : eScholarship, University of California, 2020
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44
Exploring Trajectories of Language Development in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder Across Multiple Measures ...
Hart, Chelsie Miko. - : Arts, 2020
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45
Vignetteninterview zur Erfassung des Sprachförderwissens pädagogischer Fachkräfte (VSW)
In: Mackowiak, Katja [Hrsg.]; Beckerle, Christine [Hrsg.]; Gentrup, Sarah [Hrsg.]; Titz, Cora [Hrsg.]: Forschungsinstrumente im Kontext institutioneller (schrift-)sprachlicher Bildung. Bad Heilbrunn : Verlag Julius Klinkhardt 2020, S. 13-32 (2020)
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46
Perfil de crianças com alterações fonológicas: contributos para o diagnóstico em Terapia da Fala
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47
How Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder, Developmental Language Disorder, and Typical Language Learn to Produce Global and Local Semantic Features
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48
INVESTIGATING THE LOCUS OF THE PHONOLOGICAL DEFICIT IN GREEK CHILDREN WITH DYSLEXIA AND DEVELOPMENTAL LANGUAGE DISORDER: DEGRADED PHONOLOGICAL REPRESENTATIONS OR DEFICIENT PHONOLOGICAL ACCESS? ...
Mengisidou, Maria. - : Hellenic Journal of Psychology, 2020
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49
How Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder, Developmental Language Disorder, and Typical Language Learn to Produce Global and Local Semantic Features
In: Brain Sciences ; Volume 10 ; Issue 4 (2020)
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50
Apoyos que favorecen la comprensión del lenguaje en niños con Trastorno del Desarrollo del Lenguaje. Más allá de la literalidad de las palabras
Moreno Noguera, Sara. - : Universitat Oberta de Catalunya (UOC), 2020
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51
A Distinction Between Linguistic and Social Pragmatics Helps the Precise Characterization of Pragmatic Challenges in Children With Autism Spectrum Disorders and Developmental Language Disorder
Andrés-Roqueta, Clara; Katsos, Napoleon. - : American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, 2020
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52
Le rôle des facteurs phonologiques dans le développement des connaissances orthographiques chez l’élève dysphasique francophone du primaire
Leonti, Oxana. - 2020
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53
Posttraumatic growth following aphasia: a prospective cohort study of the first year post-stroke
Sherratt, Sue; Worrall, Linda. - : Routledge, 2020
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54
Neural indices and looking behaviors of audiovisual speech processing in infancy and early childhood
Finch, Kayla. - 2019
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55
Within-task variability on standardized language tests predicts autism spectrum disorder: a pilot study of the Response Dispersion Index
In: Faculty Journal Articles (2019)
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56
« Il faut dire, on dit, ça veut dire… » : étude des formes et fonctions des interventions métalangagières en situation d’intervention orthophonique
In: ISSN: 2248-2547 ; EISSN: 2284-5437 ; Studii de lingvistică ; https://hal.univ-lorraine.fr/hal-02962402 ; Studii de lingvistică, Editura Universităţii din Oradea, Oradea, România, 2019, 9 (2), pp.153-176 (2019)
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57
Pathogenic variants in USP7 cause a neurodevelopmental disorder with speech delays, altered behavior, and neurologic anomalies.
In: Genetics in medicine : official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics, vol 21, iss 8 (2019)
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58
Verbs with Alternating Transitivity in Children with Developmental Language Impairment ...
Σούρλα, Στυλιανή Γρηγορίου. - : Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, 2019
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59
Revisiting Research on Grammatical Gender Acquisition by Russian-Speaking Children ...
Ogneva, Anastasiia. - : Zenodo, 2019
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60
Revisiting Research on Grammatical Gender Acquisition by Russian-Speaking Children ...
Ogneva, Anastasiia. - : Zenodo, 2019
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