LINGUIST List 3.164
Wed 19 Feb 1992
Disc: Genes and Language Disorders
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, Re: 3.142 Queries: Registers, Acquisition
"Alan Prince", Genes and Language Disorders
Message 1: Re: 3.142 Queries: Registers, Acquisition
Date: Fri, 14 Feb 1992 12:51:00Re: 3.142 Queries: Registers, Acquisition
From: <smithkutormed.bitnet>
Subject: Re: 3.142 Queries: Registers, Acquisition
There is growing interest and debate regarding the nature of language
impairment
and its relation to a theory of Universal Grammar. Myrna Gopnik claims that
language-impaired individuals do not have linguistic features such as "plural"
and "tense". As a result they must memorize each instance and appropriate
use rather than having a productive rule. She makes these claims based on
sentence completion tasks like "Everyday the man walks to school, yesterday
he -----" and grammaticality judgement tasks. Some language-impaired children
and adults she tested had difficulty judging and correcting errors and
sometimes omitted the inflectional morpheme in the sentence completion task.
This work is described in Gopnik, M. (1990). Feature-blind grammar and
dysphasia., Nature, 344. Gopnik, M. (1990). Feature Blindness: A case
study. Language Acquisition, 1, 139-164., Gopnik, M. and Crago, M.B.
(in press). Familial aggregation of a developmental language disorder.
Cognition. This last article may be out now, I don't know.
For alternative views, the work of Laurence Leonard is relevant (e.g.
Phonological deficits in children with developmental language impairment,
Brain and Langauge, 16, 73-86).
Also, I am currently looking at morphological skills in normal and language-
impaired children and their ability to implicitly and explicitly analyse
morphological structure.
One thing to keep in mind when you are thinking of these issues. I think it
is important to distinguish between two different populations: individuals
with overall cognitive deficits and individuals with specific language
impairment but normal non-verbal skills. Individuals with overall cognitive
deficits
generally show linguistic development roughly comparable to their overall
development (i.e. if they are 4 years behind in general cognitive development,
their language may also be 4 years behind). I think this is very different
from a specific lag in language development compared to normal development in
other areas. We might want to handle these things differently from a
theoretical point of view. Both interesting, though, and might be able to
tell us a lot about modulariy.
Karen Smith
University of Connecticut
Message 2: Genes and Language Disorders
Date: Thu, 13 Feb 92 13:11:42 -0Genes and Language Disorders
From: "Alan Prince" <princechaos.cs.brandeis.edu>
Subject: Genes and Language Disorders
Gopnik's work appears (at least) in the following:
Gopnik, M. (1990) Feature-blind grammar and dysphasia, Nature, 344, p.715.
Gopnik, M. (1990b) Feature-blindness: a case study. Language Acquisition I,
p.139-164.
Gopnik, M. (1and M. Crago (1991) Familial aggregation of a developmental
language disorder, Cognition 39, 1-50.
Intersested parties should examine these references.
I'd also like to express concern about the sneering quality of
several of the posittings. , which does n -- Jakobson's memorable term
`self-defamatory'
comes to mind.
-Alan Prince