Phonological short-term memory and individual differences in learning to speak: a bilingual case study
Autor: | Gisela E. Speidel |
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Rok vydání: | 1993 |
Předmět: |
Linguistics and Language
Language arts Repetition (rhetorical device) First language 05 social sciences Short-term memory Phonology Verbal learning Language and Linguistics Linguistics language.human_language Education German 030507 speech-language pathology & audiology 03 medical and health sciences Language development language 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences 0305 other medical science Psychology 050104 developmental & child psychology |
Zdroj: | First Language. 13:69-91 |
ISSN: | 1740-2344 0142-7237 |
DOI: | 10.1177/014272379301303705 |
Popis: | The language development of two bilingual siblings, who learned to speak at greatly different rates, is briefly described. The child with the delayed onset of speech had difficulty with articulation, syntax, function words and inflections, particularly when speaking in German. Now, as a young teenager, he has no overt speech problem in English, his preferred language, and he does well in school and on standardized achievement tests of language arts and mathematics. Nevertheless, on a storytelling task at age 12;6, he used significantly shorter, less complex sentences than his sister did at the same age. In German, his 'mother tongue' yet less preferred language, he still has major grammatical difficulties. Recent memory tests showed that his early difficulty with immediate verbal repetition is still present. His difficulty is most pronounced on a verbal short-term memory task requiring repetition of unrelated words, whereas on a task where the verbal input can be reproduced nonverbally, his short-term memory is excellent. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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