Chloe Marshall - SLI & Dyslexia - Dyslexia Guild Summer Conference 2011

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1 Specific Language Impairment and Dyslexia Chloë Marshall Department of Language and Communication Science, City University London Keynote talk at the Dyslexia Action Summer Conference, 30 th June 2011

Transcript of Chloe Marshall - SLI & Dyslexia - Dyslexia Guild Summer Conference 2011

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Specific Language Impairment and Dyslexia

Chloë Marshall

Department of Language and Communication Science, City University London

Keynote talk at the Dyslexia Action Summer Conference, 30th June 2011

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Significant difficulties in learning to read and spell, despite:

Significant difficulties in acquiring expressive language and language comprehension, despite:

Adequate exposure to literacy Adequate exposure to language

Normal sensory abilities Normal sensory abilities

Average or above average non-verbal IQ

Average or above average non-verbal IQ

No additional developmental disorder that could explain literacy difficulties

No additional developmental disorder that could explain language difficulties

DyslexiaSpecific Language Impairment (SLI)

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Characteristics of SLI(example from boy aged 8)

SLT: What does your brother Ryan like to eat?CHILD: Pot noodle and chips SLT: And what about you? CHILD: And he’s like crispsSLT: He likes crisps, what about you? CHILD: I just like icecream, not pot noodle. SLT: You don’t like pot noodle? CHILD: I think it’s disgusting. SLT: I agree with you! CHILD: Make me sick. Started to hurting.

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Characteristics of SLI(same child as before)

CHILD: And the girl was thinking to eat the chocolate,making a mess. Suddenly the girl was filled with a mess! And the lady was bit surprise!

SLT: And who is that lady? CHILD: The mum! The lady clean him on his face. SLT: On her face. It’s a girl, isn’t it? CHILD: The girl. SLT: So she cleaned her on her face, that’s

right. What will she do with the clothes? CHILD: Make him dirty. SLT: Well, the girl’s made them dirty so what will

mummy do with the clothes? CHILD: Take them to the wash!

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Some characteristics of SLI

• Errors in:– Syntax– Morphology– Vocabulary– Phonology

• Also found in signed languages

• Affects around 7% of preschool children

• Can persist into adolescence/ adulthood

• Has a genetic component

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Overlap between dyslexia and SLI

McArthur et al (2000): 102 children: SLI (aged 6-9) 110 children: dyslexia (aged 7-14)

50 113 49SLI Dyslexia

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Understanding the overlap

• Challenges:– identified at different ages, by different professionals

• Perhaps SLI turns into dyslexia?

• Many preschool children diagnosed with SLI go on to have dyslexia.

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Bishop and Snowling’s additional deficit model (2004)

dyslexia normal

SLIpoor

comprehenders

phonology-

-

language

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Bishop & Snowling’s model in a different format

Phon. processing deficit Dyslexia Word reading problems

Oral language difficultiesLanguage deficits SLI

Problems: • Not all children with SLI have dyslexia.• Not all children with SLI have phonological deficits

of the type found in dyslexia

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Profile of a child with SLI, but not dyslexia

Boy, aged 12;11 Standard score

Literacy: WORD

single word reading 103

spelling 100

comprehension 72 (-1.87)

Phonology:

PhAB

rhyme 95

spoonerisms 98

rapid naming - digits 94

non-word reading 100

Language

sentence comprehension 88

word comprehension 75 (-1.67)

sentence repetition 65 (-2.33)

test of word-finding 83 (-1.15)

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Additional difficulties:Passive sentences

The man is eaten by the fish

(scored 7/12; actives, 12/12)

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Additional difficulties:Verb inflection

Buzz is stirring his tea. Everyday Buzz stirs his tea. Yesterday Buzz stirred his tea.

Agreement: 16/20Past tense: 12/20

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Study to investigate language, literacy and phonology in SLI and dyslexia

• Funded by ESRC, 2004-2008, at UCL.• Groups of children 8-12 years-old:

– SLI+dyslexia– SLI-only– Dyslexia-only

• Investigating phonological deficits and links to language deficits.

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Comparing children with SLI+dyslexia, SLI-only and dyslexia-only

-2.5

-2

-1.5

-1

-0.5

0

0.5

z-sc

ore SLI + dyslexia

SLI only

Dyslexia only

TROG BPVS CELF-rs TWF

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Comparing children with SLI+dyslexia, SLI-only and dyslexia-only

-3

-2.5

-2

-1.5

-1

-0.5

0

z-sc

ore SLI + dyslexia

SLI only

Dyslexia only

WORDread

WORDspell

WORDcomprehension

PhABnw read

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Phonological impairments in SLI and dyslexia

SLI+Dyslexia SLI-only Dyslexia-only

Age-matched controls

Speech perception

(log)

0.17 0.20 0.30 0.57

Non-worddiscrimination

(%)

73 80 78 90

Non-wordrepetition

(%)

51 68 78 96

Digit span(raw)

9 10 11 16

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How do phonological impairments contribute to language impairments?

Verb morphology: phonological variables account for:

49.7% variance, highly significant

Passive sentence comprehension: phonological variables account for:

11.3%, significantly less than for verb morphology

Contribution of phonology depends on particular grammatical construction. Not all phonology!

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Summary

• Many children with dyslexia have SLI, but not all.

• Many preschool children diagnosed with SLI go on to have dyslexia.

• Children with SLI may, however, have adequate single word reading skills, BUT have difficulties with reading comprehension.

• Children with both SLI+dyslexia often score particularly poorly on language and literacy assessments.

• Poor phonology underlies some of the language impairment in SLI, but is not the whole story.

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Find out more about SLI (SLCN)

• I CAN:

http://www.ican.org.uk/

• Afasic:

http://www.afasicengland.org.uk/

• National year of communication –

Hello campaignhttp://www.thecommunicationtrust.org.uk/hello.aspx