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Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Vol.35 1040-1048 October 1992.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Specific-Language-Impaired Children's Quick Incidental Learning of Words

The Effect of a Pause

Mabel L. Rice 1
JoAnn Buhr 2

Janna B. Oetting 1

1 University of Kansas Lawrence
2 Marquette University Milwaukee, WI

It was hypothesized that the initial word comprehension of specific-language-impaired children would be enhanced by the insertion of a short pause just before a sentence-final novel word. Three groups of children served as subjects: twenty 5-year-old, specific-languageimpaired (SLI) children, and two comparison groups of normally developing children, 20 matched for mean length of utterance (MLU) and 32 matched for chronological age (CA). The children were randomly assigned to two conditions for viewing video programs. The programs were animated stories that featured five novel object words and five novel attribute words, presented in a voice-over narration. The experimental version introduced a pause before the targeted words; the control version was identical except for normal prosody instead of a pause. Counter to the predictions, there was no effect for condition. Insertion of a pause did not improve the SLI children's initial comprehension of novel words. There were group main effects, with the CA matches better than either of the other two groups and no differences between the SLI children and the MLU-matched children.

KEY WORDS: language impairment, children, word learning, television

Submitted on November 26, 1990
Accepted on April 14, 1991


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S. Gray
The relationship between phonological memory, receptive vocabulary, and fast mapping in young children with specific language impairment.
J Speech Lang Hear Res, October 1, 2006; 49(5): 955 - 969.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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