Lexico-semantic and Morphosyntactic Processing in French-speaking Adolescents with and Without Developmental Language Disorder

Lexico-semantic and Morphosyntactic Processing in French-speaking Adolescents with and Without Developmental Language Disorder
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Book Synopsis Lexico-semantic and Morphosyntactic Processing in French-speaking Adolescents with and Without Developmental Language Disorder by : Émilie Courteau

Download or read book Lexico-semantic and Morphosyntactic Processing in French-speaking Adolescents with and Without Developmental Language Disorder written by Émilie Courteau and published by . This book was released on 2022 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Although the scientific community is still searching for a defining characteristic of developmental language disorder (DLD), problems with subject-verb agreement, and by extension morphosyntax, have been identified as a hallmark of English-speaking preschoolers and older children with DLD. However, in studies of French-speaking preschoolers with DLD, morphosyntax has not been found to be a specific linguistic weakness. Since there is evidence that some aspects of morphosyntax in French are acquired by children with typical language (TL) development only later in childhood, such as subregular and irregular subject-verb number agreement, henceforth SUBIRR, morphosyntax has been argued to be a French marker for DLD only in older childhood and adolescence. The present thesis aimed to determine if French speaking (pre-)teenagers with TL have acquired SUBIRR number agreement, resolve whether French-speaking (pre-)teenagers with DLD are impaired on SUBIRR number agreement, and establish whether morphosyntax is an area of weakness as compared to lexico-semantics in this population. SUBIRR number agreement and morphosyntactic skills were evaluated with tasks targeting the behavioural and neurocognitive levels using linguistics tasks and event-related potentials (ERP). Furthermore, we contrasted two theories' predictions on morphosyntactic skills in (pre-)teens with DLD : the procedural deficit hypothesis (Ullman & Pierpont, 2005; Ullman et al., 2020), and the generalized slowing hypothesis (Kail, 1994). This thesis is composed of three manuscripts for publication. The first evaluated our participants' skills in multiple linguistic domains with behavioural tasks typical of clinical and research settings. Data reveal impairments in the DLD group in both lexico-semantic and morphosyntactic domains but suggest that a SUBIRR number agreement task was best at discriminating DLD from controls. The second article presents a novel ERP experimental design using only grammatical sentences, presented simultaneously with semantically and grammatically congruent or incongruent images, to assess morphosyntactic and lexico-semantic sentence processing at the neurocognitive level. Data from twenty-eight French-speaking adults show that they elicited the expected ERP components found in previous studies using ungrammatical sentences. These data served as a reference to establish whether our participants with and without TL process sentences in a mature way. The third article tested this novel ERP experiment with our (pre-)teen participants. We tested predictions of the procedural deficit hypothesis which states that children with DLD should have impaired morphosyntax due to an underlying procedural memory deficit, and the generalized slowing hypothesis, which proposes that all linguistic domains should be impaired due to an underlying processing deficit. This experimental design was run on teens with and without DLD. Although some processing delays were found in the DLD group, results on most conditions better fit the procedural deficit hypothesis. This study suggests that, in contrast with morphosyntax, lexico-semantics is a relative strength in teenagers with DLD when processing linguistic information at the neurocognitive level. Overall, this thesis reveals that morphosyntax, tested through SUBIRR number agreement, is especially impaired in French-speaking teens with DLD when compared to their TL peers. We discuss the findings in relation to clinical practice and highlight the importance of examining neurocognitive processes in language assessment.


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