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. 2012 Sep;39(4):835-62.
doi: 10.1017/S0305000911000365. Epub 2011 Nov 29.

The interface between neighborhood density and optional infinitives: normal development and Specific Language Impairment

Affiliations

The interface between neighborhood density and optional infinitives: normal development and Specific Language Impairment

Jill R Hoover et al. J Child Lang. 2012 Sep.

Abstract

The effect of neighborhood density on optional infinitives was evaluated for typically developing (TD) children and children with Specific Language Impairment (SLI). Forty children, twenty in each group, completed two production tasks that assessed third person singular production. Half of the sentences in each task presented a dense verb, and half presented a sparse verb. Children's third person singular accuracy was compared across dense and sparse verbs. Results showed that the TD group was significantly less likely to use optional infinitives with dense, rather than sparse verbs. In contrast, the distribution of optional infinitives for the SLI group was independent of verb neighborhood density. Follow-up analyses showed that the lack of neighborhood density effect for the SLI group could not be attributed to heterogeneous neighborhood density effects or floor effects. Results were interpreted within the Optional Infinitive/Extended Optional Infinitive accounts for typical language development and SLI for English-speaking children.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Mean third person singular accuracy for dense verbs (striped bars) versus sparse verbs (solid bars) by task (sentence imitation and spontaneous elicitation) for each group (TD and SLI). Error bars indicate standard error of the mean.

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