The acquisition of complex predicates in japanese specifically language-impaired and normally developing children.

S Fukuda, S E Fukuda
Author Information
  1. S Fukuda: Department of Linguistics, McGill University, Canada. sfukud2@po-box.mcgill.ca

Abstract

Japanese exhibits two different types of morphological processes. Some morphologically complex predicates are generated within the domain of the lexicon, whereas others are generated outside the domain of the lexicon. An elicited production task involving both types of complex predicates was administered to six Japanese children with specific language impairment (JSLI) and six children with normal language development (JNLD). The JSLI children experienced significant difficulty forming the lexicon-external complex predicates but much less difficulty with the lexicon-internal complex predicates while the performance of the JNLD children exhibited no such asymmetry. These preliminary results suggest that the deficit of SLI affects the ability to construct implicit procedural rules for morphology that are generated outside the lexicon while their lexical operations for morphology that are generated within the domain of the lexicon remain relatively unimpaired.

MeSH Term

Child
Child Language
Child, Preschool
Humans
Language
Language Disorders
Language Tests
Severity of Illness Index
Verbal Learning

Word Cloud

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