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. 2013 Sep-Dec;46(5-6):413-27.
doi: 10.1016/j.jcomdis.2013.09.001. Epub 2013 Sep 18.

Lexical activation during sentence comprehension in adolescents with history of Specific Language Impairment

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Lexical activation during sentence comprehension in adolescents with history of Specific Language Impairment

Arielle Borovsky et al. J Commun Disord. 2013 Sep-Dec.

Abstract

One remarkable characteristic of speech comprehension in typically developing (TD) children and adults is the speed with which the listener can integrate information across multiple lexical items to anticipate upcoming referents. Although children with Specific Language Impairment (SLI) show lexical deficits (Sheng & McGregor, 2010) and slower speed of processing (Leonard et al., 2007), relatively little is known about how these deficits manifest in real-time sentence comprehension. In this study, we examine lexical activation in the comprehension of simple transitive sentences in adolescents with a history of SLI and age-matched, TD peers. Participants listened to sentences that consisted of the form, Article-Agent-Action-Article-Theme, (e.g., The pirate chases the ship) while viewing pictures of four objects that varied in their relationship to the Agent and Action of the sentence (e.g., Target, Agent-Related, Action-Related, and Unrelated). Adolescents with SLI were as fast as their TD peers to fixate on the sentence's final item (the Target) but differed in their post-action onset visual fixations to the Action-Related item. Additional exploratory analyses of the spatial distribution of their visual fixations revealed that the SLI group had a qualitatively different pattern of fixations to object images than did the control group. The findings indicate that adolescents with SLI integrate lexical information across words to anticipate likely or expected meanings with the same relative fluency and speed as do their TD peers. However, the failure of the SLI group to show increased fixations to Action-Related items after the onset of the action suggests lexical integration deficits that result in failure to consider alternate sentence interpretations.

Learning outcomes: As a result of this paper, the reader will be able to describe several benefits of using eye-tracking methods to study populations with language disorders. They should also recognize several potential explanations for lexical deficits in SLI, including possible reduced speed of processing, and degraded lexical representations. Finally, they should recall the main outcomes of this study, including that adolescents with SLI show different timing and location of eye-fixations while interpreting sentences than their age-matched peers.

Keywords: Eye tracking; SLI; Sentence comprehension.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
An example of an image array and associated auditory stimuli used in the study. In any single trial, one of four possible auditory sentences is paired with the image display. Across all possible image/sentence combinations, each individual image appears in all possible conditions, yielding a completely balanced design.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Time-course of fixating on target and competitor interest areas during the sentence for participants with SLI (A) and for TD controls (B).
Figure 3
Figure 3
Group and differential fixation maps across several time windows. Areas of dark red in the subtraction image indicate regions where the SLI group fixated significantly more than did the TD group, and areas of dark blue indicate areas where the TD group spent more time in fixation.

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