Divergence of verbal expression and embodied knowledge: Evidence from speech and gesture in children with specific language impairment

Citation
Jl. Evans et al., Divergence of verbal expression and embodied knowledge: Evidence from speech and gesture in children with specific language impairment, LANG COGN P, 16(2-3), 2001, pp. 309-331
Citations number
62
Categorie Soggetti
Psycology
Journal title
LANGUAGE AND COGNITIVE PROCESSES
ISSN journal
01690965 → ACNP
Volume
16
Issue
2-3
Year of publication
2001
Pages
309 - 331
Database
ISI
SICI code
0169-0965(200104)16:2-3<309:DOVEAE>2.0.ZU;2-6
Abstract
It has been suggested that phonological working memory serves to link speec h comprehension to production. We suggest further that impairments in phono logical working memory may influence the way in which children represent an d express their knowledge about the world around them. In particular, child ren with severe phonological working memory deficits may have difficulty re taining stable representations of phonological forms, which results in weak links with meaning representations; however, nonverbal meaning representat ions might develop appropriately due to input from other modalities (e.g., vision, action). Typically developing children often express emerging knowl edge in gesture before they are able to express this knowledge explicitly i n their speech. In this study we explore the extent to which children with specific language impairment (SLI) with severe phonological working memory deficits express knowledge uniquely in gesture as compared to speech. Using a paradigm in which gesture-speech relationships have been studied extensi vely, children with SLI and conservation judgement-matched, typically devel oping controls were asked to solve and explain a set of Piagetian conservat ion tasks. When gestures accompanied their explanations, the children with SLI expressed information uniquely in gesture more often than did the typic ally developing children. Further, the children with SLI often expressed mo re sophisticated knowledge about conservation in gesture (and in some cases , distributed across speech and gesture) than in speech. The data suggest t hat for the children with SLI, their embodied, perceptually-based knowledge about conservation was rich, but they were not always able to express this knowledge verbally. We argue that this pattern of gesture-speech mismatch may be due to poor links between phonological representations and embodied meanings for children with phonological working memory deficits.