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Who did Buzz see someone? Grammaticality judgement of wh-questions in typically developing children and children with Grammatical-SLI

This paper tests claims that children with Grammatical(G)-SLI are impaired in hierarchical structural dependencies at the clause level and in whatever underlies such dependencies with respect to movement, chain formation and feature checking; that is, their impairment lies in the syntactic computati...

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Autores principales: van der Lely, Heather K.J., Jones, Melanie, Marshall, Chloë R.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: North Holland Publishing 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3030106/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21318176
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.lingua.2010.10.007
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author van der Lely, Heather K.J.
Jones, Melanie
Marshall, Chloë R.
author_facet van der Lely, Heather K.J.
Jones, Melanie
Marshall, Chloë R.
author_sort van der Lely, Heather K.J.
collection PubMed
description This paper tests claims that children with Grammatical(G)-SLI are impaired in hierarchical structural dependencies at the clause level and in whatever underlies such dependencies with respect to movement, chain formation and feature checking; that is, their impairment lies in the syntactic computational system itself (the Computational Grammatical Complexity hypothesis proposed by van der Lely in previous work). We use a grammaticality judgement task to test whether G-SLI children's errors in wh-questions are due to the hypothesised impairment in syntactic dependencies at the clause level or lie in more general processes outside the syntactic system, such as working memory capacity. We compare the performance of 14 G-SLI children (aged 10–17 years) with that of 36 younger language-matched controls (aged 5–8 years). We presented matrix wh-subject and object questions balanced for wh-words (who/what/which) that were grammatical, ungrammatical, or semantically inappropriate. Ungrammatical questions contained wh-trace or T-to-C dependency violations that G-SLI children had previously produced in elicitation tasks. G-SLI children, like their language controls, correctly accepted grammatical questions, but rejected semantically inappropriate ones. However, they were significantly impaired in rejecting wh-trace and T-to-C dependency violations. The findings provide further support for the CGC hypothesis that G-SLI children have a core deficit in the computational system itself that affects syntactic dependencies at the clause level.
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spelling pubmed-30301062011-02-11 Who did Buzz see someone? Grammaticality judgement of wh-questions in typically developing children and children with Grammatical-SLI van der Lely, Heather K.J. Jones, Melanie Marshall, Chloë R. Lingua Article This paper tests claims that children with Grammatical(G)-SLI are impaired in hierarchical structural dependencies at the clause level and in whatever underlies such dependencies with respect to movement, chain formation and feature checking; that is, their impairment lies in the syntactic computational system itself (the Computational Grammatical Complexity hypothesis proposed by van der Lely in previous work). We use a grammaticality judgement task to test whether G-SLI children's errors in wh-questions are due to the hypothesised impairment in syntactic dependencies at the clause level or lie in more general processes outside the syntactic system, such as working memory capacity. We compare the performance of 14 G-SLI children (aged 10–17 years) with that of 36 younger language-matched controls (aged 5–8 years). We presented matrix wh-subject and object questions balanced for wh-words (who/what/which) that were grammatical, ungrammatical, or semantically inappropriate. Ungrammatical questions contained wh-trace or T-to-C dependency violations that G-SLI children had previously produced in elicitation tasks. G-SLI children, like their language controls, correctly accepted grammatical questions, but rejected semantically inappropriate ones. However, they were significantly impaired in rejecting wh-trace and T-to-C dependency violations. The findings provide further support for the CGC hypothesis that G-SLI children have a core deficit in the computational system itself that affects syntactic dependencies at the clause level. North Holland Publishing 2011-02 /pmc/articles/PMC3030106/ /pubmed/21318176 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.lingua.2010.10.007 Text en © 2011 Elsevier B.V. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Open Access under CC BY 3.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) license
spellingShingle Article
van der Lely, Heather K.J.
Jones, Melanie
Marshall, Chloë R.
Who did Buzz see someone? Grammaticality judgement of wh-questions in typically developing children and children with Grammatical-SLI
title Who did Buzz see someone? Grammaticality judgement of wh-questions in typically developing children and children with Grammatical-SLI
title_full Who did Buzz see someone? Grammaticality judgement of wh-questions in typically developing children and children with Grammatical-SLI
title_fullStr Who did Buzz see someone? Grammaticality judgement of wh-questions in typically developing children and children with Grammatical-SLI
title_full_unstemmed Who did Buzz see someone? Grammaticality judgement of wh-questions in typically developing children and children with Grammatical-SLI
title_short Who did Buzz see someone? Grammaticality judgement of wh-questions in typically developing children and children with Grammatical-SLI
title_sort who did buzz see someone? grammaticality judgement of wh-questions in typically developing children and children with grammatical-sli
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3030106/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21318176
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.lingua.2010.10.007
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