Auditory lexical decisions in developmental language disorder: A meta-analysis of behavioural studies

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Auditory lexical decisions in developmental language disorder: A meta-analysis of behavioural studies. / Jones, Sam; Brandt, Silke .
In: Journal of Speech, Language and Hearing Research, Vol. 61, No. 7, 07.2018, p. 1766-1783.

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Jones, S & Brandt, S 2018, 'Auditory lexical decisions in developmental language disorder: A meta-analysis of behavioural studies', Journal of Speech, Language and Hearing Research, vol. 61, no. 7, pp. 1766-1783. https://doi.org/10.1044/2018_JSLHR-L-17-0447

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Jones S, Brandt S. Auditory lexical decisions in developmental language disorder: A meta-analysis of behavioural studies. Journal of Speech, Language and Hearing Research. 2018 Jul;61(7):1766-1783. doi: https://doi.org/10.1044/2018_JSLHR-L-17-0447

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Jones, Sam ; Brandt, Silke . / Auditory lexical decisions in developmental language disorder: A meta-analysis of behavioural studies. In: Journal of Speech, Language and Hearing Research. 2018 ; Vol. 61, No. 7. pp. 1766-1783.

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TY - JOUR

T1 - Auditory lexical decisions in developmental language disorder: A meta-analysis of behavioural studies

AU - Jones, Sam

AU - Brandt, Silke

PY - 2018/7

Y1 - 2018/7

N2 - Purpose Despite the apparent primacy of syntactic deficits, children with developmental language disorder (DLD) often also evidence lexical impairments. In particular, it has been argued that this population have difficulty forming lexical representations that are detailed enough to support effective spoken word processing. In order to better understand this deficit, a meta-analysis of studies testing children with DLD in the auditory lexical decision task was conducted. The objective was to provide summary effect size estimates for accuracy and response time measures for comparisons to age- and language-matched control groups.Method Two thousand three hundred seventy-two records were initially identified through electronic searches and expert consultation, with this cohort reduced to 9 through duplicate removal and the application of eligibility and quality criteria. The final study cohort included 499 children aged 3;8–11;4 (years;months).Results Multivariate analysis suggests that children with DLD were significantly less accurate in the auditory lexical decision task than age-matched controls. For the response time estimate, however, confidence intervals for the same group comparison crossed 0, suggesting no reliable difference between groups. Confidence intervals also crossed 0 for language-matched control estimates for both accuracy and response time, suggesting no reliable difference between groups on either measure.Conclusion Results broadly support the hypothesis that children with DLD have difficulty in forming detailed lexical representations relative to age- though not language-matched peers. However, further work is required to determine the performance profiles of potential subgroups and the impact of manipulating different lexical characteristics, such as the position and degree of nonword error, phonotactic probability, and semantic network size.

AB - Purpose Despite the apparent primacy of syntactic deficits, children with developmental language disorder (DLD) often also evidence lexical impairments. In particular, it has been argued that this population have difficulty forming lexical representations that are detailed enough to support effective spoken word processing. In order to better understand this deficit, a meta-analysis of studies testing children with DLD in the auditory lexical decision task was conducted. The objective was to provide summary effect size estimates for accuracy and response time measures for comparisons to age- and language-matched control groups.Method Two thousand three hundred seventy-two records were initially identified through electronic searches and expert consultation, with this cohort reduced to 9 through duplicate removal and the application of eligibility and quality criteria. The final study cohort included 499 children aged 3;8–11;4 (years;months).Results Multivariate analysis suggests that children with DLD were significantly less accurate in the auditory lexical decision task than age-matched controls. For the response time estimate, however, confidence intervals for the same group comparison crossed 0, suggesting no reliable difference between groups. Confidence intervals also crossed 0 for language-matched control estimates for both accuracy and response time, suggesting no reliable difference between groups on either measure.Conclusion Results broadly support the hypothesis that children with DLD have difficulty in forming detailed lexical representations relative to age- though not language-matched peers. However, further work is required to determine the performance profiles of potential subgroups and the impact of manipulating different lexical characteristics, such as the position and degree of nonword error, phonotactic probability, and semantic network size.

U2 - https://doi.org/10.1044/2018_JSLHR-L-17-0447

DO - https://doi.org/10.1044/2018_JSLHR-L-17-0447

M3 - Article

VL - 61

SP - 1766

EP - 1783

JO - Journal of Speech, Language and Hearing Research

JF - Journal of Speech, Language and Hearing Research

SN - 1092-4388

IS - 7

ER -