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The encoding of word forms into memory may be challenging for college students with developmental language impairment
Authors:Karla McGregor  Tim Arbisi-Kelm  Nichole Eden
Institution:University of Iowa, Iowa City, USA
Abstract:Purpose: To describe the word-learning problems characteristic of developmental language impairment (LI).

Method: College students with LI (n?=?39) or normal language development (ND, n?=?40) attempted to learn novel word forms. Training for half of the words was meaning-focused; training for the other half was form-focused. Form recognition and stem completion tasks administered immediately after training tapped encoding of the lexical configuration and a repetition of the stem completion task one week later tapped consolidation. A visual world paradigm tapped lexical engagement.

Result: At the immediate post-test, the LI group was poorer at recognition and completion of word forms than their ND peers, suggesting a deficit in encoding the lexical configuration. However, the gap between the LI and ND groups in stem completion did not grow over the week, suggesting intact consolidation. Form-focused training yielded better performance than meaning-focused training at immediate- and one week tests. For both groups, newly trained words slowed the recognition of familiar English words, revealing lexical engagement.

Conclusion: The encoding of word-form configurations is challenging for some, but not all, college students with LI. Training that encourages a focus on the form may be a useful part of vocabulary intervention for those affected.
Keywords:Developmental language impairment  word learning  memory
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