431 results on '"Tomblin J"'
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2. Language and Reading Impairments Are Associated with Increased Prevalence of Non-Right-Handedness
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Abbondanza, Filippo, Dale, Philip S., Wang, Carol A., Hayiou-Thomas, Marianna E., Toseeb, Umar, Koomar, Tanner S., Wigg, Karen G., Feng, Yu, Price, Kaitlyn M., Kerr, Elizabeth N., Guger, Sharon L., Lovett, Maureen W., Strug, Lisa J., van Bergen, Elsje, Dolan, Conor V., Tomblin, J. Bruce, Moll, Kristina, Schulte-Körne, Gerd, Neuhoff, Nina, Warnke, Andreas, Fisher, Simon E., Barr, Cathy L., Michaelson, Jacob J., Boomsma, Dorret I., Snowling, Margaret J., Hulme, Charles, Whitehouse, Andrew J. O., Pennell, Craig E., Newbury, Dianne F., Stein, John, Talcott, Joel B., Bishop, Dorothy V. M., and Paracchini, Silvia
- Abstract
Handedness has been studied for association with language-related disorders because of its link with language hemispheric dominance. No clear pattern has emerged, possibly because of small samples, publication bias, and heterogeneous criteria across studies. Non-right-handedness (NRH) frequency was assessed in N = 2503 cases with reading and/or language impairment and N = 4316 sex-matched controls identified from 10 distinct cohorts (age range 6-19 years old; European ethnicity) using a priori set criteria. A meta-analysis (N[subscript cases] = 1994) showed elevated NRH % in individuals with language/reading impairment compared with controls (OR = 1.21, CI = 1.06-1.39, p = 0.01). The association between reading/language impairments and NRH could result from shared pathways underlying brain lateralization, handedness, and cognitive functions.
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- 2023
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3. A Preliminary Epidemiologic Study of Social (Pragmatic) Communication Disorder in the Context of Developmental Language Disorder
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Ellis Weismer, Susan, Tomblin, J. Bruce, Durkin, Maureen S., Bolt, Daniel, and Palta, Mari
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Background: There is extremely limited population-based research on social (pragmatic) communication disorder (SCD). Population-based samples have the potential to better characterize the SCD phenotype by mitigating confounds and biases that are typical of convenience and clinical samples. Aims: The aims of this preliminary epidemiologic study were to advance our understanding of the SCD phenotype relative to developmental language disorder (DLD), obtain an estimate of prevalence, identify risk factors and lay the groundwork for future population level research of SCD. Methods & Procedures: We analysed existing data from the EpiSLI Database to examine social communication skills in 393 8th grade (13-14 years) children with and without a history of DLD. The primary measure used to evaluate SCD was the Children's Communication Checklist (CCC-2). Two case definitions of SCD reflecting DSM-5 criteria were examined. Both definitions involved significant pragmatic impairment, employing a commonly adopted clinical cut-point of 1.5 SD. In one case, pragmatic deficits could occur along with structural language deficits and, in the other case (established using principal component analysis), pragmatic and social skills were disproportionately lower than structural language abilities. Outcomes & Results: When using the first case definition, SCD was much more common in children with a history of DLD than without DLD and history of language disorder at kindergarten was a significant risk factor for SCD in adolescence. However, it is important to note that SCD could be found in children with no prior deficits in other aspects of language. When the second definition was employed, SCD was equally distributed across children with and without a history of DLD. Male sex was a significant risk factor using this case definition of SCD. The estimated prevalence of SCD ranged from 7% (SE = 1.5%) to 11% (SE = 1.7%), acknowledging that prevalence depends on the cut-point selected to determine communication disorder. Conclusions & Implications: These findings contribute to our understanding of the association between SCD and DLD by recognizing varying profiles of pragmatic and social communication difficulties, which in turn may help refine our diagnostic categories. Preliminary prevalence estimates of SCD can serve as an initial guidepost for identification and planning for intervention services for this condition.
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- 2021
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4. Early Literacy Predictors and Second-Grade Outcomes in Children Who Are Hard of Hearing
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Tomblin, J. Bruce, Oleson, Jake, Ambrose, Sophie E., Walker, Elizabeth A., and Moeller, Mary P.
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This study contrasted the early literacy outcomes of children who are hard of hearing (CHH) with children with normal hearing (CNH). At age 5, prereading skills of oral language, phonological processing, and print knowledge were examined in CHH (N = 180) and CNH (N = 80). The CHH had poorer oral language and phonological processing abilities than the CNH but comparable knowledge of print. At age 8, measures of word reading, and reading comprehension yielded no differences between CHH (N = 108) and CNH (N = 62) except for reading comprehension for the moderately severe CHH. Reading achievement in CHH was found to exceed predictions based on prereading performance. This resilience was associated with gains in oral language during the early school years.
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- 2020
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5. Procedural and declarative memory brain systems in developmental language disorder (DLD)
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Lee, Joanna C., Nopoulos, Peggy C., and Tomblin, J. Bruce
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- 2020
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6. Altered brain structures in the dorsal and ventral language pathways in individuals with and without developmental language disorder (DLD)
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Lee, Joanna C., Dick, Anthony Steven, and Tomblin, J. Bruce
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- 2020
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7. A real-time mechanism underlying lexical deficits in developmental language disorder: Between-word inhibition
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McMurray, Bob, Klein-Packard, Jamie, and Tomblin, J. Bruce
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- 2019
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8. Alveolar and Postalveolar Voiceless Fricative and Affricate Productions of Spanish-English Bilingual Children with Cochlear Implants
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Li, Fangfang, Bunta, Ferenc, and Tomblin, J. Bruce
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Purpose: This study investigates the production of voiceless alveolar and postalveolar fricatives and affricates by bilingual and monolingual children with hearing loss who use cochlear implants (CIs) and their peers with normal hearing (NH). Method: Fifty-four children participated in our study, including 12 Spanish-English bilingual CI users (M = 6;0 [years;months]), 12 monolingual English-speaking children with CIs (M = 6;1), 20 bilingual children with NH (M = 6;5), and 10 monolingual Englishspeaking children with NH (M = 5;10). Picture elicitation targeting /s/, /t?/, and /?/ was administered. Repeated-measures analyses of variance comparing group means for frication duration, rise time, and centroid frequency were conducted for the effects of CI use and bilingualism. Results: All groups distinguished the target sounds in the 3 acoustic parameters examined. Regarding frication duration and rise time, the Spanish productions of bilingual children with CIs differed from their bilingual peers with NH. English frication duration patterns for bilingual versus monolingual CI users also differed. Centroid frequency was a stronger place cue for children with NH than for children with CIs. Conclusion: Patterns of fricative and affricate production display effects of bilingualism and diminished signal, yielding unique patterns for bilingual and monolingual CI users.
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- 2017
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9. Aided Hearing Moderates the Academic Outcomes of Children With Mild to Severe Hearing Loss
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Tomblin, J. Bruce, Oleson, Jake, Ambrose, Sophie E., Walker, Elizabeth A., McCreery, Ryan W., and Moeller, Mary Pat
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- 2020
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10. Philosophical and Theoretical Foundations of Developmental Language Disorder
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Tomblin, J Bruce
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Developmental Language Disorder - Abstract
This manuscript provides a comprehensive framework for the scientific study and clinical management of developmental communication disorders and in particular developmental language disorder. This framework is grounded in both the philosophy of cognitive science and psychology and in the philosophy of medicine. It acknowledges that notions of function and dysfunction are central to understanding developmental communication disorders. I will argue that functionalism and in particular mechanistic functionalism provides a strong basis for understanding individual differences in language performance in the form of interpretation and generation of messages. I further argue that there are no forms of variation in the functioning of this message mechanism that are inherently defective or disordered as would be expected within naturalistic account of health and ill-health within the philosophy of medicine. Instead, I argue that notions of health and ill-health have been shown to be grounded in cultural values. As such, in order to understand developmental language disorder, we must understand how language provides important functional utilities to individuals within their societies. In this regard, understanding developmental communication disorders requires and appreciation and articulation of both natural and social sciences.
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- 2023
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11. The Slow Developmental Time Course of Real-Time Spoken Word Recognition
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Rigler, Hannah, Farris-Trimble, Ashley, Greiner, Lea, Walker, Jessica, Tomblin, J. Bruce, and McMurray, Bob
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This study investigated the developmental time course of spoken word recognition in older children using eye tracking to assess how the real-time processing dynamics of word recognition change over development. We found that 9-year-olds were slower to activate the target words and showed more early competition from competitor words than 16-year-olds; however, both age groups ultimately fixated targets to the same degree. This contrasts with a prior study of adolescents with language impairment (McMurray, Samelson, Lee, & Tomblin, 2010) that showed a different pattern of real-time processes. These findings suggest that the dynamics of word recognition are still developing even at these late ages, and developmental changes may derive from different sources than individual differences in relative language ability.
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- 2015
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12. The Influence of Reading on Vocabulary Growth: A Case for a Matthew Effect
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Duff, Dawna, Tomblin, J. Bruce, and Catts, Hugh
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Purpose: Individual differences in vocabulary development may affect academic or social opportunities. It has been proposed that individual differences in word reading could affect the rate of vocabulary growth, mediated by the amount of reading experience, a process referred to as a "Matthew effect" (Stanovich, 1986). Method: In the current study, assessments of written word-reading skills in the 4th grade and oral vocabulary knowledge collected in kindergarten and in the 4th, 8th, and 10th grades from a large epidemiologically based sample (n = 485) allowed a test of the relationship of early word-reading skills and the subsequent rate of vocabulary growth. Results: Consistent with the hypothesis, multilevel modeling revealed the rate of vocabulary growth after the 4th grade to be significantly related to 4th-grade word reading after controlling for kindergarten vocabulary level, that is, above average readers experienced a higher rate of vocabulary growth than did average readers. Conclusions: Vocabulary growth rate differences accumulated over time such that the effect on vocabulary size was large.
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- 2015
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13. Procedural Learning and Individual Differences in Language
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Lee, Joanna C. and Tomblin, J. Bruce
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The aim of the current study was to examine different aspects of procedural memory in young adults who varied with regard to their language abilities. We selected a sample of procedural memory tasks, each of which represented a unique type of procedural learning, and has been linked, at least partially, to the functionality of the corticostriatal system. The findings showed that variance in language abilities is associated with performance on different domains of procedural memory, including the motor domain (as shown in the pursuit rotor task), the cognitive domain (as shown in the weather prediction task), and the linguistic domain (as shown in the nonword repetition priming task). These results implicate the corticostriatal system in individual differences in language.
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- 2015
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14. Medical Referral Patterns and Etiologies for Children With Mild-to-Severe Hearing Loss
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Judge, Paul D., Jorgensen, Erik, Lopez-Vazquez, Monica, Roush, Patricia, Page, Thomas A., Moeller, Mary Pat, Tomblin, J. Bruce, Holte, Lenore, and Buchman, Craig
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- 2019
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15. Nonverbal Visual Sequential Learning in Children With Cochlear Implants: Preliminary Findings
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Klein, Kelsey E., Walker, Elizabeth A., and Tomblin, J. Bruce
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- 2019
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16. Individual Differences in Language Ability Are Related to Variation in Word Recognition, Not Speech Perception: Evidence from Eye Movements
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McMurray, Bob, Munson, Cheyenne, and Tomblin, J. Bruce
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Purpose: The authors examined speech perception deficits associated with individual differences in language ability, contrasting auditory, phonological, or lexical accounts by asking whether lexical competition is differentially sensitive to fine-grained acoustic variation. Method: Adolescents with a range of language abilities (N = 74, including 35 impaired) participated in an experiment based on McMurray, Tanenhaus, and Aslin (2002) . Participants heard tokens from six 9-step voice onset time (VOT) continua spanning 2 words ("beach/peach", "beak/peak", etc.) while viewing a screen containing pictures of those words and 2 unrelated objects. Participants selected the referent while eye movements to each picture were monitored as a measure of lexical activation. Fixations were examined as a function of both VOT and language ability. Results: Eye movements were sensitive to within-category VOT differences: As VOT approached the boundary, listeners made more fixations to the competing word. This did not interact with language ability, suggesting that language impairment is not associated with differential auditory sensitivity or phonetic categorization. Listeners with poorer language skills showed heightened competitors fixations overall, suggesting a deficit in lexical processes. Conclusion: Language impairment may be better characterized by a deficit in lexical competition (inability to suppress competing words), rather than differences in phonological categorization or auditory abilities.
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- 2014
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17. Understanding Individual Differences in Language Development across the School Years. Language and Speech Disorders
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Tomblin, J. Bruce, Nippold, Marilyn A., Tomblin, J. Bruce, and Nippold, Marilyn A.
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This volume presents the findings of a large-scale study of individual differences in spoken (and heard) language development during the school years. The goal of the study was to investigate the degree to which language abilities at school entry were stable over time and influential in the child's overall success in important aspects of development. The methodology was a longitudinal study of over 600 children in the US Midwest during a 10-year period. The language skills of these children along with reading, academic, and psychosocial outcomes were measured. There was intentional oversampling of children with poor language ability without being associated with other developmental or sensory disorders. Furthermore, these children could be subgrouped based on their nonverbal abilities, such that one group represents children with "specific" language impairment (SLI), and the other group with "nonspecific" language impairment (NLI) represents poor language along with depressed nonverbal abilities. Throughout the book, the authors consider whether these distinctions are supported by evidence obtained in this study and which aspects of development are impacted by poor language ability. Data are provided that allow conclusions to be made regarding the level of risk associated with different degrees of poor language and whether this risk should be viewed as lying on a continuum. The volume will appeal to researchers and professionals with an interest in children's language development, particularly those working with children who have a range of language impairments. This includes Speech and Language Pathologists; Child Neuropsychologists; Clinical Psychologists working in Education, as well as Psycholinguists and Developmental Psychologists. Chapters include: (1) Background of the Study (J. B. Tomblin); (2) General Design and Methods (J. B. Tomblin); (3) The Character and Course of Individual Differences in Spoken Language (J. B. Tomblin, M. A. Nippold, M. E. Fey, and X. Zhang); (4) Features of Language Impairment in the School Years (J. B. Tomblin and M. Nippold); (5) The Role of Processing in Children and Adolescents with Language Impairment (L. B. Leonard, S. E. Weismer, C. Weber-Fox, and C. A. Miller); (6) The Relationship Between Language and Reading Abilities (H. W. Catts, M. Fey, S. E. Weismer, and M. S. Bridges); and (7) Educational and Psychosocial Outcomes of Language Impairment in Kindergarten (J. B. Tomblin).
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- 2014
18. Acquisition of Tense Marking in English-Speaking Children with Cochlear Implants: A Longitudinal Study
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Guo, Ling-Yu, Spencer, Linda J., and Tomblin, J. Bruce
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This study investigated the development of tense markers (e.g., past tense -ed) in children with cochlear implants (CIs) over a 3-year span. Nine children who received CIs before 30 months of age participated in this study at three, four, and five years postimplantation. Nine typical 3-, 4-, and 5-year- olds served as control groups. All children participated in a story-retell task. Percent correct of tense marking in the task was computed. Within the groups, percent correct of tense marking changed significantly in children with CIs and in typical children who had more hearing experience. Across the groups, children with CIs were significantly less accurate in tense marking than typical children at four and five years postimplantation. In addition, the performance of tense marking in children with CIs was correlated with their speech perception skills at earlier time points. Errors of tense marking tended to be omission rather than commission errors in typical children as well as in children with CIs. The findings suggested that despite the perceptual and processing constraints, children who received CIs may learn tense marking albeit with a delayed pattern.
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- 2013
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19. Understanding language processing in variable populations on their own terms: Towards a functionalist psycholinguistics of individual differences, development, and disorders.
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McMurray, Bob, Baxelbaum, Keith S., Colby, Sarah, and Bruce Tomblin, J.
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CULTURE ,PHONOLOGICAL awareness ,DEAFNESS ,APPLIED psychology ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,LANGUAGE acquisition ,PSYCHOLINGUISTICS ,HEARING disorders ,PHILOSOPHY ,LANGUAGE disorders - Abstract
Classic psycholinguistics seeks universal language mechanisms for all people, emphasizing the "modal" listener: hearing, neurotypical, monolingual, and young adults. Applied psycholinguistics then characterizes differences in terms of their deviation from the modal. This mirrors naturalist philosophies of health which presume a normal function, with illness as a deviation. In contrast, normative positions argue that illness is partially culturally derived. It occurs when a person cannot meet socio-culturally defined goals, separating differences in biology (disease) from socio-cultural function (illness). We synthesize this with mechanistic functionalist views in which language emerges from diverse lower-level mechanisms with no one-to-one mapping to function (termed the functional mechanistic normative approach). This challenges primarily psychometric approaches—which are culturally defined—suggesting a process-based approach may yield more insight. We illustrate this with work on word recognition across multiple domains: cochlear implant users, children, language disorders, L2 learners, and aging. This work investigates each group's solutions to the problem of word recognition as interesting in its own right. Variation in the process is value-neutral, and psychometric measures complement this, reflecting fit with cultural expectations (disease vs. illness). By examining variation in processing across people with a variety of skills and goals, we arrive at deeper insight into fundamental principles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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20. Reinforcement Learning in Young Adults with Developmental Language Impairment
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Lee, Joanna C. and Tomblin, J. Bruce
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The aim of the study was to examine reinforcement learning (RL) in young adults with developmental language impairment (DLI) within the context of a neurocomputational model of the basal ganglia-dopamine system (Frank, Seeberger, & O'Reilly, 2004). Two groups of young adults, one with DLI and the other without, were recruited. A probabilistic selection task was used to assess how participants implicitly extracted reinforcement history from the environment based on probabilistic positive/negative feedback. The findings showed impaired RL in individuals with DLI, indicating an altered gating function of the striatum in testing. However, they exploited similar learning strategies as comparison participants at the beginning of training, reflecting relatively intact functions of the prefrontal cortex to rapidly update reinforcement information. Within the context of Frank's model, these results can be interpreted as evidence for alterations in the basal ganglia of individuals with DLI. (Contains 1 table and 5 figures.)
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- 2012
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21. Prevalence and Nature of Late-Emerging Poor Readers
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Catts, Hugh W., Compton, Donald, Tomblin, J. Bruce, and Bridges, Mindy Sittner
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Some children demonstrate adequate or better reading achievement in early school grades but fall significantly behind their peers in later grades. These children are often referred to as late-emerging poor readers. In this study, we investigated the prevalence and heterogeneity of these poor readers. We also examined the early language and nonverbal cognitive abilities of late-emerging poor readers. Participants were 493 children who were a subsample from an epidemiological study of language impairments in school-age children. In kindergarten, children were administered a battery of language, early literacy, and nonverbal cognitive measures. Word reading and reading comprehension achievement was assessed in 2nd, 4th, 8th, and tenth grades. Latent transition analysis was used to model changes in reading classification (good vs. poor reader) across grades. Population estimates revealed that 13.4% of children could be classified as late-emerging poor readers. These children could be divided into those with problems in comprehension alone (52%), word reading alone (36%), or both (12%). Further results indicated that late-emerging poor readers often had a history of language and/or nonverbal cognitive impairments in kindergarten. Subtypes of poor readers also differed significantly in their profiles of language, early literacy, and nonverbal cognitive abilities in kindergarten. Results are discussed in terms of causal factors and implications for early identification. (Contains 10 tables, 2 footnotes, and 1 figure.)
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- 2012
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22. Growing up with a Cochlear Implant: Education, Vocation, and Affiliation
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Spencer, Linda J., Tomblin, J. Bruce, and Gantz, Bruce J.
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The long-term educational/vocational, affiliation, and quality-of-life outcomes of the first and second cohorts of children with bilateral, profound hearing loss who received cochlear implants under a large National Institutes of Health-funded study was investigated in 41 of 61 eligible participants. Educational and vocational outcomes were collected from user survey data. Affiliation and quality-of-life data were collected from the Satisfaction-with-Life scale and the Deaf Identity Scale. Qualitative results indicated that compared with their hearing, adult-age peers, this group obtained high educational achievement, and they reported a very high satisfaction of life. With respect to forming an identity in these first 2 cohorts of cochlear implant users, we found that most of the individuals endorsed a dual identity, which indicates they feel just as comfortable with Deaf individuals as they do with hearing individuals. Quantitative results revealed a significant relationship between ability to hear and ability to speak, in addition to consistency of device use. Additional relationships were found between mother's and the individual's educational statuses, hearing scores, and communication system used. Younger individuals scored higher on satisfaction-with-life measures, and they also tended to endorse a dual identity more often. Taken together, these findings diminish concerns that profoundly deaf individuals growing up with cochlear implants will become culturally bereft and unable to function in the hearing world.
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- 2012
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23. Examining the Comorbidity of Language Impairment and Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
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Mueller, Kathryn L. and Tomblin, J. Bruce
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Language impairment (LI) and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) are 2 relatively common developmental disorders that have been shown to have high rates of co-occurrence in a number of studies, and this phenomenon is also commonplace in the experience of many clinicians. Understanding this comorbidity, therefore, is central to building coherent taxonomic systems within the field of speech-language pathology for clinical and theoretical reasons. As we review the current literature we consider which models of comorbidity are relevant to the study of LI and ADHD (see Tomblin & Mueller, 2012, for a review of the models that are discussed). Finally, we present original data on the comorbidity of LI and ADHD from a large population-based sample that has been studied over the last 2 decades in the state of Iowa. We evaluate how this contributes to current understanding of these disorders.
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- 2012
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24. Diagnosis of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder and Its Behavioral, Neurological, and Genetic Roots
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Mueller, Kathryn L. and Tomblin, J. Bruce
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Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a common developmental disorder often associated with other developmental disorders including speech, language, and reading disorders. Here, we review the principal features of ADHD and current diagnostic standards for the disorder. We outline the ADHD subtypes, which are based upon the dimensions of inattention and hyperactivity. These serve as the phenotype for ADHD. Current nomenclature implies a deficit in the cognitive construct of attention, and this has taken researchers on an extended inquiry into several potential endophenotypes underlying ADHD, in particular executive function and its subcomponents. We review this literature and then delve into the neurobiology of ADHD. This research suggests that the corticostriatal system is a strong candidate system in the etiology of ADHD, in part because of the dopaminergic system, which is known to play a role in the disorder. We present this system as an important contributor to the comorbidity of ADHD with other developmental disorders, especially language disorder.
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- 2012
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25. How Can Comorbidity with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Aid Understanding of Language and Speech Disorders?
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Tomblin, J. Bruce and Mueller, Kathyrn L.
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This article provides a background for the topic of comorbidity of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and spoken and written language and speech disorders that extends through this issue of "Topics in Language Disorders." Comorbidity is common within developmental disorders and may be explained by many possible reasons. Some of these can be viewed as artifacts as simple as chance occurrence or because of the way that the research participants were sampled. If these artifacts are eliminated, then comorbidity can be informative with respect to possible causes of the disorders that are comorbid. Several possible etiologic models are presented along with a general framework for considering levels of causality in developmental disorders. (Contains 2 figures and 2 tables.)
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- 2012
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26. The Role of Developmental Levels in Examining the Effect of Subject Types on the Production of Auxiliary 'Is' in Young English-Speaking Children
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Guo, Ling-Yu, Van Horne, Amanda J. Owen, and Tomblin, J. Bruce
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Purpose: Prior work (Guo, Owen, & Tomblin, 2010) has shown that at the group level, auxiliary "is" production by young English-speaking children was symmetrical across lexical noun and pronominal subjects. Individual data did not uniformly reflect these patterns. On the basis of the framework of the gradual morphosyntactic learning (GML) hypothesis, the authors tested whether the addition of a theoretically motivated developmental measure, tense productivity (TP), could assist in explaining these individual differences. Method: Using archival data from 20 children between age 2;8 and 3;4 (years;months), the authors tested the ability of 3 developmental measures (TP; finite verb morphology composite, FVMC; mean length of utterance, MLU) to predict use of auxiliary "is" with different subject types. Results: TP, but not MLU or FVMC, significantly improved model fit. Children with low TP scores produced auxiliary "is" more accurately with pronominal subjects than with lexical subjects. The facilitative effect of pronominal subjects on the production of auxiliary "is," however, was not found in children with high TP scores. Conclusion: The finding that the effect of subject types on the production accuracy of auxiliary "is" changed with children's TP is consistent with the GML hypothesis.
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- 2011
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27. Effect of Subject Types on the Production of Auxiliary 'Is' in Young English-Speaking Children
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Guo, Ling-Yu, Owen, Amanda J., and Tomblin, J. Bruce
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Purpose: In this study, the authors tested the unique checking constraint (UCC) hypothesis and the usage-based approach concerning why young children variably use tense and agreement morphemes in obligatory contexts by examining the effect of subject types on the production of auxiliary "is". Method: Twenty typically developing 3-year-olds were included in this study. The children's production of auxiliary "is" was elicited in sentences with pronominal subjects, high-frequency lexical noun phrase (NP) subjects (e.g., "the dog"), and low-frequency lexical NP subjects (e.g., "the deer"). Results: As a group, children did not use auxiliary "is" more accurately with pronominal subjects than with lexical NP subjects. Furthermore, individual data revealed that although some children used auxiliary "is" more accurately with pronominal subjects than with lexical NP subjects, the majority of children did not show this trend. Conclusion: The symmetry observed between lexical and pronominal subjects supports the predictions of the UCC hypothesis, although additional mechanisms may be needed to account for the asymmetry between subject types in some individual children. Discrepant results between the present study and previous studies were attributed to differences in task formats and children's developmental levels.
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- 2010
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28. The EpiSLI Database: A Publicly Available Database on Speech and Language
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Tomblin, J. Bruce
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Purpose: This article describes a database that was created in the process of conducting a large-scale epidemiologic study of specific language impairment (SLI). As such, this database will be referred to as the EpiSLI database. Children with SLI have unexpected and unexplained difficulties learning and using spoken language. Although there is no uniform standard for the diagnosis of SLI, the construct encompasses a language deficit occurring in the presence of grossly normal sensory and nonverbal cognitive abilities (H. Tager-Flusberg & J. Cooper, 1999). Although these language difficulties are most apparent during the preschool and early school years, evidence now exists that these problems are usually present well into adulthood and are probably present throughout a person's life (see, for instance, C. J. Johnson et al., 1999; S. E. Stothard, M. J. Snowling, D. V. M. Bishop, B. B. Chipchase, & C. A. Kaplan, 1998; J. B. Tomblin, 2008). Discussion: Much of what we know of these children has come from research on children who have been clinically identified and served. Certainly, by studying those who are being served, our research base is most likely to be relevant to clinical services. However, there is a danger in this research strategy. It is quite possible that not all children with SLI are clinically identified and served within our service delivery systems. In such circumstances, there is the potential for systematic factors to influence which children do or do not find their way to clinical service. Clinical Implications: If our research questions are concerned with the characteristics of the actual population of children with SLI that exists in our communities and not just those who are being served, then we need to turn to methods of epidemiology to aid our research.
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- 2010
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29. Abnormal subcortical components of the corticostriatal system in young adults with DLI: A combined structural MRI and DTI study
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Lee, Joanna C., Nopoulos, Peggy C., and Bruce Tomblin, J.
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- 2013
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30. Language Features in a Mother and Daughter of a Chromosome 7;13 Translocation Involving 'FOXP2'
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Tomblin, J. Bruce, O'Brien, Marlea, and Shriberg, Lawrence D.
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Purpose: The aims of this study were (a) to locate the breakpoints of a balanced translocation (7;13) within a mother (B) and daughter (T); (b) to describe the language and cognitive skills of B and T; and (c) to compare this profile with affected family members of the KE family who have a mutation within "FOXP2." Method: The breakpoint locations for T and B were identified by use of fluorescent in situ hybridization analysis followed by DNA sequencing using long-range polymer chain reaction amplification methods. The cognitive and language characteristics were obtained via the use of standardized tests of intelligence, receptive and expressive vocabulary and sentence use, and a spontaneous language sample. Results: The translocation breakpoints in T and B were found in "FOXP2" on chromosome 7 and in "RFC3" on chromosome 13. T and B's pattern of relative strengths and weaknesses across their cognitive and language performance was found to be similar to descriptions of the affected KE family members. Conclusions: Prior reports of individuals with chromosomal rearrangements of "FOXP2" have emphasized their speech impairment. This study provides additional evidence that language--in particular, grammar--is likely to be influenced by abnormalities of "FOXP2" function.
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- 2009
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31. Syntactic Development in Adolescents with a History of Language Impairments: A Follow-Up Investigation
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Nippold, Marilyn A., Mansfield, Tracy C., Billow, Jesse L., and Tomblin, J. Bruce
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Purpose: Syntactic development in adolescents was examined using a spoken discourse task and standardized testing. The primary goal was to determine whether adolescents with a history of language impairments would differ from those with a history of typical language development (TLD). This is a companion study to one that examined these same adolescents 2 years earlier (M. A. Nippold, T. C. Mansfield, J. L. Billow, & J. B. Tomblin, 2008). Method: The participants were 15-year-old adolescents with a history of specific language impairment (SLI; n = 102), nonspecific language impairment (NLI; n = 77), or TLD (n = 247). A sample of spoken discourse was elicited using a Peer Conflict Resolution (PCR) task and analyzed for mean length of T-unit, clausal density, and subordinate clause use. In addition, 2 subtests from the Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals, Third Edition (E. Semel, E. H. Wiig, & W. A. Secord, 1995), Concepts and Directions and Recalling Sentences, were administered. Results: On the PCR task, the TLD group outperformed the SLI and NLI groups on mean length of T-unit, clausal density, and nominal clause use, and the TLD group outperformed the NLI group on relative clause use. On the standardized testing, the TLD group outperformed the SLI and NLI groups, and the SLI group outperformed the NLI group. Correlation coefficients calculated between the nonstandardized and standardized measures of syntax were statistically significant and positive. Conclusions: Speech-language pathologists may wish to employ the PCR task to examine syntactic development in adolescents as a supplement to standardized testing. (Contains 4 tables.)
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- 2009
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32. Evaluating Phonological Processing Skills in Children with Prelingual Deafness Who Use Cochlear Implants
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Spencer, Linda J. and Tomblin, J. Bruce
- Abstract
This study investigated the phonological processing skills of 29 children with prelingual, profound hearing loss with 4 years of cochlear implant experience. Results were group matched with regard to word-reading ability and mother's educational level with the performance of 29 hearing children. Results revealed that it is possible to obtain a valid measure of phonological processing (PP) skills in children using CIs. They could complete rhyming tasks and were able to complete sound-based tasks using standard test materials provided by a commercial test distributor. The CI children completed tasks measuring PP, but there were performance differences between the CI users and the hearing children. The process of learning phonological awareness (PA) for the children with CIs was characterized by a longer, more protracted learning phase than their counterparts with hearing. Tests of phonological memory skills indicated that when the tasks were controlled for presentation method and response modality, there were no differences between the performance of children with CIs and their counterparts with hearing. Tests of rapid naming revealed that there were no differences between rapid letter and number naming between the two groups. Results yielded a possible PP test battery for children with CI experience. (Contains 8 figures and 3 tables.)
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- 2009
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33. Expository Discourse in Adolescents with Language Impairments: Examining Syntactic Development
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Nippold, Marilyn A., Mansfield, Tracy C., Billow, Jesse L., and Tomblin, J. Bruce
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Purpose: This study examined syntactic development in a large cohort of adolescents. At kindergarten, each participant had been identified as having specific language impairment (SLI), nonspecific language impairment (NLI), or typical language development (TLD). Method: The participants (n = 444) had a mean age of 13;11 (years;months; range = 12;10-15;5). Language samples were elicited in 2 genres, conversational and expository, and analyzed for mean length of T-unit and subordinate clause production. Results: Mean length of T-unit and the use of nominal, relative, and adverbial clauses were greater during the expository task than the conversational task for all groups. Thus, even the SLI and NLI groups produced longer sentences containing greater amounts of subordination when speaking in the expository genre than in the conversational genre. No group differences were revealed by the conversational task. However, on the expository task, the TLD group outperformed both the SLI and NLI groups on mean length of T-unit, and the TLD group outperformed the NLI group on relative clause use. Conclusions: Speech-language pathologists may wish to employ expository discourse tasks rather than conversational tasks to examine syntactic development in adolescents. (Contains 2 tables.)
- Published
- 2008
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34. Long-Term Trajectories of the Development of Speech Sound Production in Pediatric Cochlear Implant Recipients
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Tomblin, J. Bruce, Peng, Shu-Chen, and Spencer, Linda J.
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Purpose: This study characterized the development of speech sound production in prelingually deaf children with a minimum of 8 years of cochlear implant (CI) experience. Method: Twenty-seven pediatric CI recipients' spontaneous speech samples from annual evaluation sessions were phonemically transcribed. Accuracy for these speech samples was evaluated in piecewise regression models. Results: As a group, pediatric CI recipients showed steady improvement in speech sound production following implantation, but the improvement rate declined after 6 years of device experience. Piecewise regression models indicated that the slope estimating the participants' improvement rate was statistically greater than 0 during the first 6 years postimplantation, but not after 6 years. The group of pediatric CI recipients' accuracy of speech sound production after 4 years of device experience reasonably predicts their speech sound production after 5-10 years of device experience. Conclusions: The development of speech sound production in prelingually deaf children stabilizes after 6 years of device experience, and typically approaches a plateau by 8 years of device use. Early growth in speech before 4 years of device experience did not predict later rates of growth or levels of achievement. However, good predictions could be made after 4 years of device use.
- Published
- 2008
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35. Speech Disruptions in the Narratives of English-Speaking Children with Specific Language Impairment
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Guo, Ling-yu, Tomblin, J. Bruce, and Samelson, Vicki
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Purpose: This study examined the types, frequencies, and distribution of speech disruptions in the spoken narratives of children with specific language impairment (SLI) and their age-matched (CA) and language-matched (LA) peers. Method: Twenty 4th-grade children with SLI, 20 typically developing CA children, and 20 younger typically developing LA children were included in this study. Speech disruptions (i.e., silent pauses and vocal hesitations) occurring in the narratives of these children were analyzed. Results: Children with SLI exhibited speech disruption rates that were higher than those of their age-matched peers but not higher than those of their language-matched peers. The difference in disruption rates between the SLI and CA groups was restricted to silent pauses of 500-1000 ms. Moreover, children with SLI produced more speech disruptions than their peers before phrases but not before sentences, clauses, or words. Conclusions: These findings suggest that there is a relationship between language ability and speech disruptions. Higher disruption rates at phrase boundaries in children with SLI than in their age-matched peers reflect lexical and syntactic deficits in children with SLI.
- Published
- 2008
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36. Characterizing the Growth Trajectories of Language-Impaired Children between 7 and 11 Years of Age
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Law, James, Tomblin, J. Bruce, and Zhang, Xuyang
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Background: A number of different systems have been suggested for classifying language impairment in children but, to date, no one system has been widely accepted. Method: This paper outlines an alternative system looking for distinct patterns of change in receptive language skills across time, involving a secondary analysis of children identified as having specific language impairment. Participants: The participants were 184 children age-assessed at 3 time points--7, 8, and 11 years of age. Results: The pattern of receptive language development is highly predictable. The dominant pattern of growth is consistent with declining rates of growth over time for all children. The primary way in which the children differ is with respect to their initial severity. The testing of the 2 classification systems revealed some statistically significant differences among the subtypes with regard to the shape of the growth rates, but the effect sizes associated with these differences were very small. Thus, it is possible to conclude that beyond the dominant pattern of growth, some subtypes of language impairment at 7 years of age showed only subtle differences in receptive language change across time. The results are discussed in terms of the sample selection and the age of the children who were studied.
- Published
- 2008
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37. Imitative Production of Rising Speech Intonation in Pediatric Cochlear Implant Recipients
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Peng, Shu-Chen, Tomblin, J. Bruce, and Spencer, Linda J.
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Purpose: This study investigated the acoustic characteristics of pediatric cochlear implant (CI) recipients' imitative production of rising speech intonation, in relation to the perceptual judgments by listeners with normal hearing (NH). Method: Recordings of a yes-no interrogative utterance imitated by 24 prelingually deafened children with a CI were extracted from annual evaluation sessions. These utterances were perceptually judged by adult NH listeners in regard with intonation contour type (non-rise, partial-rise, or full-rise) and contour appropriateness (on a 5-point scale). Fundamental frequency, intensity, and duration properties of each utterance were also acoustically analyzed. Results: Adult NH listeners' judgments of intonation contour type and contour appropriateness for each CI participant's utterances were highly positively correlated. The pediatric CI recipients did not consistently use appropriate intonation contours when imitating a yes-no question. Acoustic properties of speech intonation produced by these individuals were discernible among utterances of different intonation contour types according to NH listeners' perceptual judgments. Conclusions: These findings delineated the perceptual and acoustic characteristics of speech intonation imitated by prelingually deafened children and young adults with a CI. Future studies should address whether the degraded signals these individuals perceive via a CI contribute to their difficulties with speech intonation production. Acoustic parameters examined in this study is appended. (Contains 2 tables, 7 figures and 1 footnote.)
- Published
- 2007
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38. The Dimensionality of Language Ability in School-Age Children
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Tomblin, J. Bruce and Zhang, Xuyang
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Purpose: This study asked if children's performance on language tests reflects different dimensions of language and if this dimensionality changes with development. Method: Children were given standardized language batteries at kindergarten and at second, fourth, and eighth grades. A revised modified parallel analysis was used to determine the dimensionality of these items at each grade level. A confirmatory factor analysis was also performed on the subtest scores to evaluate alternate models of dimensionality. Results: The revised modified parallel analysis revealed a single dimension across items with evidence of either test specific or language area specific minor dimensions at different ages. The confirmatory factor analysis tested models involving modality (receptive or expressive) and domain (vocabulary or sentence use) against a single-dimension model. The 2-dimensional model involving domains of vocabulary and sentence use fit the data better than the single-dimensional model; however, the single-dimension model also fit the data well in the lower grades. Conclusions: Much of the variance in standardized measures of language appears to be attributable to a single common factor or trait. There is a developmental trend during middle childhood for grammatical abilities and vocabulary abilities to become differentiated. These measures do not provide differential information concerning receptive and expressive abilities.
- Published
- 2006
39. Speech, Prosody, and Voice Characteristics of a Mother and Daughter with a 7;13 Translocation Affecting 'FOXP2'
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Shriberg, Lawrence D., Ballard, Kirrie J., and Tomblin, J. Bruce
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Purpose: The primary goal of this case study was to describe the speech, prosody, and voice characteristics of a mother and daughter with a breakpoint in a balanced 7;13 chromosomal translocation that disrupted the transcription gene, "FOXP2" (cf. J. B. Tomblin et al., 2005). As with affected members of the widely cited KE family, whose communicative disorders have been associated with a point mutation in the "FOXP2" gene, both mother and daughter had cognitive, language, and speech challenges. A 2nd goal of the study was to illustrate in detail, the types of speech, prosody, and voice metrics that can contribute to phenotype sharpening in speech-genetics research. Method: A speech, prosody, and voice assessment protocol was administered twice within a 4-month period. Analyses were aided by comparing profiles from the present speakers (the "TB" family) with those from 2 groups of adult speakers: 7 speakers with acquired (with one exception) spastic or spastic-flaccid dysarthria and 14 speakers with acquired apraxia of speech. Results: The descriptive and inferential statistical findings for 13 speech, prosody, and voice variable supported the conclusion that both mother and daughter had spastic dysarthria, an apraxia of speech, and residual developmental distortion errors. Conclusion: These findings are consistent with, but also extend, the reported communicative disorders in affected members of the KE family. A companion article (K. J. Ballard, L. D. Shriberg, J. R. Duffy, & J. B. Tomblin, 2006) reports information from the orofacial and speech motor control measures administered to the same family; reports on neuropsychological and neuroimaging findings are in preparation. (Contains 7 tables and 4 figures.)
- Published
- 2006
40. A Normativist Account of Language-Based Learning Disability
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Tomblin, J. Bruce
- Abstract
Research on learning disabilities (LD) depends upon a conceptual framework that specifies what it should explain, what kinds of data are needed, and how these data are to be arranged in order to provide a meaningful explanation. An argument is made that LD are no different in this respect than any other form of human illness. In this article, a theory of LD based on weak normativism drawn from the philosophy of medicine is presented. This theory emphasizes that cultural values (norms) determine which aspects of human experience and function are instances of ill health. Thus, ill health is fundamentally normative. However, the experiences and behaviors themselves arise out of the natural world and therefore can be explained by a culturally neutral natural science. Data from a longitudinal study of specific language impairment are used to show that academic achievement is culturally evaluated, that low achievement is disvalued, and that therefore actions are taken to help the poor achiever. Spoken language abilities in kindergarten are associated with judgments of the adequacy of fourth grade academic achievement and are mediated by reading prior to fourth grade and also via a path that is independent of reading. It is argued that poor academic achievement may be viewed as a disvalued state consistent with an illness, whereas language and reading skills can be viewed as basic causal systems that can explain the child's learning performance. Properties of this causal system are value free, except that they can inherit disvalue by their association with poor achievement. It remains to be determined whether the notion of LD is to be equated with poor achievement and therefore serve as a type of illness or whether it is to be viewed as a particular cause of poor achievement and thus functions as a type of disease associated with poor achievement. The conceptual framework lays out the alternative meanings for LD and the choice between these alternatives will ultimately depend on how it is used in the LD research community.
- Published
- 2006
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41. Toward Diagnostic and Phenotype Markers for Genetically Transmitted Speech Delay
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Shriberg, Lawrence D., Lewis, Barbara A., and Tomblin, J. Bruce
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Converging evidence supports the hypothesis that the most common subtype of childhood speech sound disorder (SSD) of currently unknown origin is genetically transmitted. We report the first findings toward a set of diagnostic markers to differentiate this proposed etiological subtype (provisionally termed "speech delay-genetic") from other proposed subtypes of SSD of unknown origin. Conversational speech samples from 72 preschool children with speech delay of unknown origin from 3 research centers were selected from an audio archive. Participants differed on the number of biological, nuclear family members (0 or 2+) classified as positive for current and/or prior speech-language disorder. Although participants in the 2 groups were found to have similar speech competence, as indexed by their Percentage of Consonants Correct scores, their speech error patterns differed significantly in 3 ways. Compared with children who may have reduced genetic load for speech delay (no affected nuclear family members), children with possibly higher genetic load (2+ affected members) had (a) a significantly higher proportion of relative omission errors on the Late-8 consonants; (b) a significantly lower proportion of relative distortion errors on these consonants, particularly on the sibilant fricatives /s/, /z/, and /esh/; and (c) a significantly lower proportion of backed /s/ distortions, as assessed by both perceptual and acoustic methods. Machine learning routines identified a 3-part classification rule that included differential weightings of these variables. The classification rule had diagnostic accuracy value of 0.83 (95% confidence limits = 0.74-0.92), with positive and negative likelihood ratios of 9.6 (95% confidence limits = 3.1-29.9) and 0.40 (95% confidence limits = 0.24-0.68), respectively. The diagnostic accuracy findings are viewed as promising. The error pattern for this proposed subtype of SSD is viewed as consistent with the cognitive-linguistic processing deficits that have been reported for genetically transmitted verbal disorders. (Contains 3 figures and 2 tables.)
- Published
- 2005
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42. The Effect of Age at Cochlear Implant Initial Stimulation on Expressive Language Growth in Infants and Toddlers
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Tomblin, J. Bruce, Barker, Brittan A., Spencer, Linda J., Zhang, Xuyang, and Gantz, Bruce J.
- Abstract
This study examined the growth of expressive language skills in children who received cochlear implants (CIs) in infancy. Repeated language measures were gathered from 29 children who received CIs between 10 and 40 months of age. Both cross-sectional and growth curve analyses were used to assess the relationship between expressive language outcomes and CI experience. A beneficial effect of earlier implantation on expressive language growth was found. Growth curve analysis showed that growth was more rapid in children implanted as infants than those implanted as toddlers. Age at initial stimulation accounted for 14.6% of the variance of the individual differences in expressive language growth rates. (Contains 6 tables and 3 figures.)
- Published
- 2005
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43. Language Sampling for Kindergarten Children with and without SLI: Mean Length of Utterance, IPSYN, and NDW
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Hewitt, Lynne E., Hammer, Carol Scheffner, Yont, Kristine M., and Tomblin, J. Bruce
- Abstract
Language sample analysis measures have long been promoted as exhibiting greater ecological validity than formal testing in the assessment of language disorder in children. In practice, their use is often restricted to preschool children, owing to lack of normative information, as well as criticisms of the validity of commonly used measures for the language of older children. This study compared scores of kindergarten children (mean age 6 years) with and without specific language impairment (SLI) on three commonly used language sample analysis measures: mean length of utterance in morphemes (MLU-m), the index of productive syntax (IPSyn), and number of different words (NDWs). Mean scores of the children with SLI were significantly lower for all three measures, though not for all subtests of the IPSyn. A number of individual differences were observed; notably, several children with SLI scored as well as those without. The problems and promise of language sampling for children beyond the preschool years are discussed in light of these results. Learning outcomes: (1) readers will gain an understanding of strengths and weaknesses of language sample measures in assessing kindergarten children with language impairment. (2) The reader will become aware of the utility of MLU in differentiating between young school age children with and without language impairment.
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- 2005
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44. Grammatical Tense Deficits in Children with Specific Language Impairment (SLI) and Nonspecific Language Impairment: Relationships with Nonverbal IQ over Time
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Rice, Mabel L., Tomblin, J. Bruce, and Hoffman, Lesa
- Abstract
The relationship between children's language acquisition and their nonverbal intelligence has a long tradition of scientific inquiry. Current attention focuses on the use of nonverbal IQ level as an exclusionary criterion in the definition of specific language impairment (SLI). Grammatical tense deficits are known as a clinical marker of SLI, but the relationship with nonverbal intelligence below the normal range has not previously been systematically studied. This study documents the levels of grammatical tense acquisition (for third-person singular -s, regular and irregular past tense morphology) in a large, epidemiologically ascertained sample of kindergarten children that comprises 4 groups: 130 children with SLI, 100 children with nonspecific language impairments (NLI), 73 children with low cognitive levels but language within normal limits (LC), and 117 unaffected control children. The study also documents the longitudinal course of acquisition for the SLI and NLI children between the ages of 6 and 10 years. The LC group did not differ from the unaffected controls at kindergarten, showing a dissociation of nonverbal intelligence and grammatical tense marking, so that low levels of nonverbal intelligence did not necessarily yield low levels of grammatical tense. The NLI group's level of performance was lower than that of the SLI group and showed a greater delay in resolution of the overgeneralization phase of irregular past tense mastery, indicating qualitative differences in growth. Implications for clinical groupings for research and clinical purposes are discussed.
- Published
- 2004
45. Explaining and Controlling Regression to the Mean in Longitudinal Research Designs
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Zhang, Xuyang and Tomblin, J. Bruce
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This tutorial is concerned with examining how regression to the mean influences research findings in longitudinal studies of clinical populations. In such studies participants are often obtained because of performance that deviates systematically from the population mean and are then subsequently studied with respect to change in the trait used for this selection. It is shown that in such research there is a potential for the estimates of change to be erroneous due to the effect of regression to the mean. The source of the regression effect is shown to arise from measurement error and a sampling bias of this measurement error in the process of selecting on extreme scores. It is also shown that regression effects are greater with measures that are less reliable and with samples that are selected with more extreme scores. Furthermore, it is shown that regression effects are particularly prominent when measures of change are based on changes in dichotomous states formed from quantitative, normally distributed traits. In addition to a formal analysis of the regression to the mean, the features of regression to the mean are demonstrated via a simulation.
- Published
- 2003
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46. The Stability of Primary Language Disorder: Four Years after Kindergarten Diagnosis
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Tomblin, J. Bruce, Zhang, Xuyang, and Buckwalter, Paula
- Abstract
The rates of change in the language status of children with language impairment unaccompanied by other developmental or sensory disorders (primary language disorder) were studied in a longitudinal sample of 196 children who were followed from kindergarten through 4th grade. Previous studies have shown that children with such language impairments have moderate rates of improvement during this age range. Also, those with the most specific deficits have the greatest likelihood of improvement. Cole and colleagues have hypothesized that such results could be due to the effect of regression to the mean (K. Cole, I. Schwartz, A. Notari, P. Dale, & P. Mills, 1995). This study used a baseline measure of language that was independent of the measure used for diagnosis in order to control for factors leading to regression to the mean. Patterns of change using the kindergarten diagnostic measure were compared to those using the baseline measure. Rates of diagnostic change between kindergarten and subsequent observation intervals showed patterns of change similar to those of past research. Comparisons using the baseline measure revealed no significant change in relative language status across the 4-year time period. The results showed that when the conditions for regression to the mean were controlled, the poor language of children with language impairments was very likely to persist during the primary school years.
- Published
- 2003
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47. Autism and Autism Risk in Siblings of Children with Specific Language Impairment
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Tomblin, J. Bruce, Hafeman, Laura L., and O'Brien, Marlea
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Background: Several studies have shown that family members of children with autism have elevated rates of spoken and written speech and language problems. Aims: This study asked whether there was also a greater rate of siblings with autism among probands with specific language impairment. Methods & Procedures: The probands in this study were 158 children with specific language impairment and 132 children with normal language status. These probands had 522 siblings who were examined for risk of autism using the Autism Behavior Checklist. Siblings found to be at risk were then examined using the Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised and the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule-G. Outcomes & Results: A concentration of siblings with risk for a diagnosis of autism was found in association with probands who had poor spoken language skills. Four siblings of the 522 (0.8%) met the diagnostic standards for autism. All the probands of these siblings had spoken language scores below--1 SD and three had diagnoses of spoken language impairment. Conclusions: These data provide additional support for a familial association between autism and spoken language impairment. (Contains 4 tables and 2 figures.)
- Published
- 2003
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48. A Longitudinal Investigation of Reading Outcomes in Children with Language Impairments.
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Catts, Hugh W., Fey, Marc E., and Tomblin, J. Bruce
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This longitudinal study followed reading progress in 208 children with language impairments (either specific or nonspecific) compared to normal and low IQ controls from kindergarten through fourth grade. Children with language impairment in kindergarten, especially nonspecific language impairment, were at high risk of reading disabilities in grades 2 and 4. Literacy knowledge in kindergarten usually predicted later reading outcomes. (Contains references.) (Author/DB)
- Published
- 2002
49. Nonword Repetition Performance in School-Age Children with and without Language Impairment.
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Weismer, Susan Ellis, Tomblin, J. Bruce, and Zhang, Xuyang
- Abstract
This study examined nonword repetition performance in 581 second graders participating in a longitudinal investigation of specific language impairment. Results indicated that children with language impairments, as well as those in intervention, exhibited deficient nonword repetition skills and that the Nonword Repetition Task is a culturally nonbiased measure of language processing. (Contains references.) (Author/DB)
- Published
- 2000
50. Language Basis of Reading and Reading Disabilities: Evidence from a Longitudinal Investigation.
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Catts, Hugh W., Fey, Marc E., Zhang, Xuyang, and Tomblin, J. Bruce
- Abstract
Investigates effects longitudinally of phonological processing and oral language abilities on children's reading and reading disabilities. Compares second grade good and poor readers on measures of oral language and phonological processing taken in kindergarten. Suggests that language-based theories of reading and reading disabilities must include both phonological processing and oral language abilities. (NH)
- Published
- 1999
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