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Under-Resourced or Overloaded? Rethinking Working Memory Deficits in Developmental Language Disorder

Dominant theoretical accounts of developmental language disorder (DLD) commonly invoke working memory capacity limitations. In the current report, we present an alternative view: That working memory in DLD is not under-resourced but overloaded due to operating on speech representations with low disc...

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Autores principales: Jones, Samuel David, Westermann, Gert
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Psychological Association 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9899422/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35482644
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/rev0000338
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author Jones, Samuel David
Westermann, Gert
author_facet Jones, Samuel David
Westermann, Gert
author_sort Jones, Samuel David
collection PubMed
description Dominant theoretical accounts of developmental language disorder (DLD) commonly invoke working memory capacity limitations. In the current report, we present an alternative view: That working memory in DLD is not under-resourced but overloaded due to operating on speech representations with low discriminability. This account is developed through computational simulations involving deep convolutional neural networks trained on spoken word spectrograms in which information is either retained to mimic typical development or degraded to mimic the auditory processing deficits identified among some children with DLD. We assess not only spoken word recognition accuracy and predictive probability and entropy (i.e., predictive distribution spread), but also use mean-field-theory based manifold analysis to assess; (a) internal speech representation dimensionality and (b) classification capacity, a measure of the networks’ ability to isolate any given internal speech representation that is used as a proxy for attentional control. We show that instantiating a low-level auditory processing deficit results in the formation of internal speech representations with atypically high dimensionality, and that classification capacity is exhausted due to low representation separability. These representation and control deficits underpin not only lower performance accuracy but also greater uncertainty even when making accurate predictions in a simulated spoken word recognition task (i.e., predictive distributions with low maximum probability and high entropy), which replicates the response delays and word finding difficulties often seen in DLD. Overall, these simulations demonstrate a theoretical account of speech representation and processing deficits in DLD in which working memory capacity limitations play no causal role.
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spelling pubmed-98994222023-02-07 Under-Resourced or Overloaded? Rethinking Working Memory Deficits in Developmental Language Disorder Jones, Samuel David Westermann, Gert Psychol Rev Articles Dominant theoretical accounts of developmental language disorder (DLD) commonly invoke working memory capacity limitations. In the current report, we present an alternative view: That working memory in DLD is not under-resourced but overloaded due to operating on speech representations with low discriminability. This account is developed through computational simulations involving deep convolutional neural networks trained on spoken word spectrograms in which information is either retained to mimic typical development or degraded to mimic the auditory processing deficits identified among some children with DLD. We assess not only spoken word recognition accuracy and predictive probability and entropy (i.e., predictive distribution spread), but also use mean-field-theory based manifold analysis to assess; (a) internal speech representation dimensionality and (b) classification capacity, a measure of the networks’ ability to isolate any given internal speech representation that is used as a proxy for attentional control. We show that instantiating a low-level auditory processing deficit results in the formation of internal speech representations with atypically high dimensionality, and that classification capacity is exhausted due to low representation separability. These representation and control deficits underpin not only lower performance accuracy but also greater uncertainty even when making accurate predictions in a simulated spoken word recognition task (i.e., predictive distributions with low maximum probability and high entropy), which replicates the response delays and word finding difficulties often seen in DLD. Overall, these simulations demonstrate a theoretical account of speech representation and processing deficits in DLD in which working memory capacity limitations play no causal role. American Psychological Association 2022-04-28 2022-11 /pmc/articles/PMC9899422/ /pubmed/35482644 http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/rev0000338 Text en © 2022 The Author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/This article has been published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Copyright for this article is retained by the author(s). Author(s) grant(s) the American Psychological Association the exclusive right to publish the article and identify itself as the original publisher.
spellingShingle Articles
Jones, Samuel David
Westermann, Gert
Under-Resourced or Overloaded? Rethinking Working Memory Deficits in Developmental Language Disorder
title Under-Resourced or Overloaded? Rethinking Working Memory Deficits in Developmental Language Disorder
title_full Under-Resourced or Overloaded? Rethinking Working Memory Deficits in Developmental Language Disorder
title_fullStr Under-Resourced or Overloaded? Rethinking Working Memory Deficits in Developmental Language Disorder
title_full_unstemmed Under-Resourced or Overloaded? Rethinking Working Memory Deficits in Developmental Language Disorder
title_short Under-Resourced or Overloaded? Rethinking Working Memory Deficits in Developmental Language Disorder
title_sort under-resourced or overloaded? rethinking working memory deficits in developmental language disorder
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9899422/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35482644
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/rev0000338
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