Utilize este identificador para referenciar este registo: https://hdl.handle.net/1822/90830

TítuloExplicit instructions do not enhance auditory statistical learning in children with developmental language disorder: evidence from event-related potentials
Autor(es)Soares, Ana Paula
Gutierrez-Dominguez, Francisco-Javier
Oliveira, Helena Mendes
Lages, Alexandrina
Guerra, Natália
Pereira, Ana Rita
Tome, David
Lousada, Marisa
Palavras-chaveDevelopmental language disorder
Statistical learning
Implicit learning
Explicit learning
SL deficit hypothesis
Procedural deficit hypothesis
Word predictability
ERP word segmentation correlates
DataJun-2022
EditoraFrontiers Media
RevistaFrontiers in Psychology
Resumo(s)A current issue in psycholinguistic research is whether the language difficulties exhibited by children with developmental language disorder [DLD, previously labeled specific language impairment (SLI)] are due to deficits in their abilities to pick up patterns in the sensory environment, an ability known as statistical learning (SL), and the extent to which explicit learning mechanisms can be used to compensate for those deficits. Studies designed to test the compensatory role of explicit learning mechanisms in children with DLD are, however, scarce, and the few conducted so far have led to inconsistent results. This work aimed to provide new insights into the role that explicit learning mechanisms might play on implicit learning deficits in children with DLD by resorting to a new approach. This approach involved not only the collection of event-related potentials (ERPs), while preschool children with DLD [relative to typical language developmental (TLD) controls] were exposed to a continuous auditory stream made of the repetition of three-syllable nonsense words but, importantly, the collection of ERPs when the same children performed analogous versions of the same auditory SL task first under incidental (implicit) and afterward under intentional (explicit) conditions. In each of these tasks, the level of predictability of the three-syllable nonsense words embedded in the speech streams was also manipulated (high vs. low) to mimic natural languages closely. At the end of both tasks' exposure phase, children performed a two-alternative forced-choice (2-AFC) task from which behavioral evidence of SL was obtained. Results from the 2-AFC tasks failed to show reliable signs of SL in both groups of children. The ERPs data showed, however, significant modulations in the N100 and N400 components, taken as neural signatures of word segmentation in the brain, even though a detailed analysis of the neural responses revealed that only children from the TLD group seem to have taken advantage of the previous knowledge to enha
TipoArtigo
URIhttps://hdl.handle.net/1822/90830
DOI10.3389/fpsyg.2022.905762
ISSN1664-1078
Versão da editorahttps://www.frontiersin.org/journals/psychology/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.905762/full
Arbitragem científicayes
AcessoAcesso aberto
Aparece nas coleções:CIPsi - Artigos (Papers)

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