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Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Vol.35 832-843 August 1992.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Diagnosing Specific Language Impairment in Adults for the Purpose of Pedigree Analysis

J. Bruce Tomblin 1
Paula R. Freese 1

Nancy L. Records 1

1 Department of Speech Pathology and Audiology The University of Iowa Iowa City

Two sets of diagnostic measures were administered to a group of 35 adults with welldocumented histories of specific language impairment and to a control group of 35 normal language users. These measures involved the comprehension and production of words and sentences in formal and spontaneous speaking activities as well as measures of verbal memory and auditory temporal perceptual ability. One set of tasks was administered in a standard face-to-face setting and the other set was given over the telephone. Multivariate and univariate tests indicated that the adults with a history of specific language impairment performed more poorly on all tasks administered. A discriminant analysis of the two sets of measures indicated that four measures in each set identified language-impaired individuals with 97% accuracy for the face-to-face battery and 95% accuracy for the telephone battery. These results suggest that it should be possible to diagnose specific language impairment in the adult family members of children with specific language impairment and therefore permit accurate construction of pedigrees for specific language impairment.

KEY WORDS: specific language mpairment, adults, pedigree analysis, outcome

Submitted on May 24, 1991
Accepted on October 17, 1991


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Copyright © 1992 by the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association.