Term
Characteristics of Williams Syndrome |
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Definition
A genetic disorder
Characterised by high linguistic, low cognitive abilities
Very talkative
Use unusual words
Good pragmatics
Speech not always representative of the cognitive level underneath
Language is delayed (starts at 3, TD is 18 months |
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Term
Study of Williams Syndrome |
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Definition
Levy (2002) studied two children with Williams Syndrome. Found they were better at syntax but worse at morphology than TD. They followed the same path of acquisition as each other, but not as TD. But didn't provide a statistically valid way of estimating similarity between two children. |
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Term
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Definition
Characterised by normal cognition, low linguistic abilities. Delayed acquisition, but can reach TD competence. |
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Term
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Definition
Studied the KE family, an English family with a hereditary disorder of language. They failed to generate overgeneralizations (e.g. digged) or novel regular forms (e.g. crived). But they did produce novel irregularizations (crive-crove) |
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Term
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Definition
Looks at grammatical morphology by children with SLI. Differ from TD in terms of the degree they use the morphemes, not whether or not they're used. Language specific errors. |
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Term
Fletcher and Ingham (1996) |
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Definition
SLI is "a significant language deficit in an otherwise normal child" (intellectually and neurologically) Reviewed many studies and found problems with a variety of different grammatical structures, but normal IQ. |
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Term
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Definition
Curtiss and de Bode (2001) |
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Term
Curtiss and de Bode (2001) |
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Definition
etiology found to be more of a factor than side of hemispherectomy. This doesn't have to contradict modularity, as modularity doesn't have to claim there's a specific part of the brain where language lives |
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Term
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Definition
origin/cause of hemispherectomy |
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Term
Fromkin - Hemispherectomy |
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Definition
Found deficiency in performance by left hemispherectomies - left hemi appears to be the base for language |
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Term
Problems with hemispherectomies |
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Definition
Small numbers of subjects - inevitable |
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Term
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Definition
Shows there's a grey area in modularity, looks at Williams Syndrome. Children still don't reach their chronological age in terms of linguistic competence. |
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Term
Fromkin's modularity evidence |
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Definition
Event Related potentials
Aphasia
Sign language aphasics
Child hemiplegics and hemidecorticates |
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Term
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Definition
Study scalp electrical activity. Different patterns of activity are found depending on whether a syntactically deviant sentence or a syntactically fine sentence is presented. Nonsence also gives a different pattern. |
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Term
Fromkin's Aphasia evidence |
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Definition
Damage to different parts of the brain lead to selective cognitive disorders |
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Term
Child hemiplegics and hemidecorticates |
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Definition
Children born with left hemisphere lesions and a deficiency in language acquisition |
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Term
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Definition
Have similar problems to hearing aphasics, suggesting the left hemisphere is dominant for language, not speach. Still correctly process non-language visual-spatial relationships |
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Term
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Definition
Children who had radiation had linguistic deficits. Normally if there is brain damage the rest of the brain will compensate, but when the linguistic bits go they're hard to take over from. This shows they're different to general cognition |
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Term
Genie's evidence for modularity |
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Definition
Partial independence is suggested between cognition and language, as more advanced on the cognitive level than syntactically. Larger vocab than TD children at her syntactic level. |
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Term
Evidence from Down's Syndrome |
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Definition
Rondal and Comblain (1996) If DS get Alzheimers, grammatical structures are not affected. Delayed acquisition, have low cognitive abilities and some language problems, so not single dissociation. |
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Term
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Definition
Low cog, normal linguistic so can be single dissociation. But still had some semantic and pragmatic difficulties, so not quite normal. Suggests syntax may be more independent of non-linguistic cognition than other aspects of language - submodules? |
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Term
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Definition
Christopher, low IQ but could translate into 15 languages - single dissociation |
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