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Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Vol.38 434-445 April 1995.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Quick Incidental Learning (QUIL) of Words by School-Age Children With and Without SLI

Janna B. Oetting 1
Mabel L. Rice 2

Linda K. Swank 3

1 Louisiana State University Baton Rouge
2 University of Kansas Lawrence
3 University of Virginia Charlottesville

CDJANNA{at}LSUVM.SNCC.LSU.EDU

This study examined Quick Incidental Learning (QUIL) of novel vocabulary by two groups of school-age children, those who were developing language normally and those who demonstrated a specific language impairment (SLI). The experimental items consisted of 20 words that referred to one of four semantic classes: object, attribute, action, and affective state. Videotaped stories were used to introduce the novel words, and word learning was measured by a picture-pointing task. For the normally developing children, the results documented a robust ability to learn words in the early school years. Comprehension gains were observed for all four word types, with the greatest gain made on the object labels. The children with SLI also demonstrated some word-learning ability, but their gain was significantly less than that of their normally developing peers. Although the general pattern of word effects was similar across the two groups, the children with SLI demonstrated a particularly low gain on words from the action class.

KEY WORDS: word acquisition, specific language impairment

Submitted on February 3, 1994
Accepted on October 18, 1994


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