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Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Vol.37 1406-1413 December 1994.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Learning and Generalization Components of Morphological Acquisition by Children With Specific Language Impairment

Is There a Functional Relation?

Linda Swisher 1
David Snow 1

1 The Child Language Laboratory The University of Arizona Tucson

Children with specific language impairment (SLI) have particular difficulty acquiring bound morphemes. To determine whether these morphological deficits spring from impairments of rule-induction or memory (storage/access) skills, 25 preschool-age children with normal language (NL) and 25 age-matched children with SLI were presented with a novel vocabulary and novel bound-morpheme learning task. A chi square analysis revealed that the children with SLI had significantly lower vocabulary learning levels than NL children. In addition, there was tentative evidence that a dependency relationship existed in some children between success in vocabulary learning and proficiency in generalizing a trained bound morpheme to untrained vocabulary stems. These findings are predicted by the storage/access but not the rule-induction theory of specific language impairment. They suggest that intervention targeting bound-morpheme skills acquisition in children with SLI might include attention to vocabulary development.

KEY WORDS: language learning, specific language impairment, verbal memory, vocabulary, morphology

Submitted on October 25, 1993
Accepted on June 13, 1994


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