When language outgrows them: Comprehension of ambiguous sentences in children with normal hearing and children with hearing loss

被引:5
|
作者
Nittrouer, Susan [1 ]
Lowenstein, Joanna H. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Florida, Dept Speech Language & Hearing Sci, POB 100074, Gainesville, FL 32610 USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
Children; Cochlear implants; Language development; Hearing loss; Academic achievement; HARD-OF-HEARING; COCHLEAR IMPLANTS; AGED CHILDREN; DEAF-CHILDREN; OUTCOMES; SPEECH; VOCABULARY; LITERACY; SKILLS;
D O I
10.1016/j.ijporl.2020.110514
中图分类号
R76 [耳鼻咽喉科学];
学科分类号
100213 ;
摘要
Background: In spite of recent gains in language development made by children with hearing loss (HL) as a result of improved auditory prostheses and earlier starts to intervention, these children continue to struggle academically at higher grade levels. We hypothesize that one reason for these incongruent outcomes for language and academics may be that the language demands of school escalate as grade level increases, outstripping the language abilities of children with HL. We tested that hypothesis by examining a higher level skill that is essential for success with academic language, the ability to access multiple interpretations for a sentence. Method: 122 children participated at the end of middle school: 56 with normal hearing (NH), 15 with moderate HL who used hearing aids (HAs), and 51 with severe-to-profound HL who used cochlear implants (CIs). Children's abilities to provide more than one interpretation for an ambiguous sentence were assessed. These sentences were ambiguous due either to words having multiple meanings or to syntactic structure that could evoke more than one interpretation. Potential predictors of those abilities were evaluated, including expressive vocabulary, comprehension of syntactic structures, grammaticality judgments, forward digit span, and several audiologic factors. Results: Children with NH performed best, children with CIs performed poorest, and children with HAs performed intermediately to those groups. Children in all groups achieved higher scores on the multiple meanings than on the syntactic structure items. The variables that were associated with performance varied across groups. Audiologic factors did not explain any variability in performance on the ambiguous sentences task for children with HL. Conclusions: The kind of linguistic flexibility needed to consider more than one interpretation for sentences lacking immediate, real-world context is essential to processing academic language. Children with HL - especially those with severe-to-profound HL who required CIs - showed deficits in this skill, which could contribute to their ongoing academic struggles. Continued language support is needed for these children to allow them to acquire the higher level language skills necessary for success through all of their years in school.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Auditory Comprehension in School-Aged Children With Normal Hearing and With Unilateral Hearing Loss
    Griffin, Amanda M.
    Poissant, Sarah F.
    Freyman, Richard L.
    LANGUAGE SPEECH AND HEARING SERVICES IN SCHOOLS, 2020, 51 (01) : 29 - 41
  • [2] A comparative study of the oral language in children with normal hearing and children with uni or bilateral hearing loss
    Sanchez-Rosso, angel Luis
    Santiago-Pardo, Rosa Belen
    Martinez-Gomez, Beatriz
    Gonzalez-Cano, Anabel
    Benito-Orejas, Jose Ignacio
    Munoz-Moreno, M. Fe
    REVISTA DE INVESTIGACION EN LOGOPEDIA, 2024, 14 (02):
  • [3] Nasalance in the speech of children with normal hearing and children with hearing loss
    Fletcher, SG
    Mahfuzh, F
    Hendarmin, H
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY, 1999, 8 (03) : 241 - 248
  • [4] PERCEPTUAL STRATEGIES EMPLOYED BY NORMAL-HEARING AND HEARING IMPAIRED CHILDREN IN COMPREHENSION OF SENTENCES CONTAINING RELATIVE CLAUSES
    DAVIS, J
    BLASDELL, R
    JOURNAL OF SPEECH AND HEARING RESEARCH, 1975, 18 (02): : 281 - 295
  • [5] Conversational skills of children with hearing loss and children with normal hearing in an integrated setting
    Duncan, J
    VOLTA REVIEW, 1999, 101 (04) : 193 - 211
  • [6] Examination of school refusal in children with normal hearing and hearing loss
    Iclal San
    Aysenur Aykul Yagcıoglu
    Dilek Soyler
    The Egyptian Journal of Otolaryngology, 41 (1)
  • [7] Home language maintenance in bilingual children with normal hearing and with hearing loss who use cochlear implants
    Bunta, Ferenc
    Castilla-Earls, Anny
    CLINICAL LINGUISTICS & PHONETICS, 2022, 36 (4-5) : 436 - 455
  • [8] The Influence of Hearing Aids on the Speech and Language Development of Children With Hearing Loss
    Tomblin, J. Bruce
    Oleson, Jacob J.
    Ambrose, Sophie E.
    Walker, Elizabeth
    Moeller, Mary Pat
    JAMA OTOLARYNGOLOGY-HEAD & NECK SURGERY, 2014, 140 (05) : 403 - 409
  • [9] The challenge of assessing language in children with hearing loss
    YoshinagaItano, C
    LANGUAGE SPEECH AND HEARING SERVICES IN SCHOOLS, 1997, 28 (04) : 362 - 373
  • [10] Associations Between Parenting Stress, Language Comprehension, and Inhibitory Control in Children With Hearing Loss
    Blank, Andrew
    Holt, Rachael Frush
    Pisoni, David B.
    Kronenberger, William G.
    JOURNAL OF SPEECH LANGUAGE AND HEARING RESEARCH, 2020, 63 (01): : 321 - 333