The use of spontaneous language measures as criteria for identifying children with specific language impairment: an attempt to reconcile clinical and research incongruence.

Criteria for identification of children as specifically language impaired (SLI) vary greatly among clinicians and researchers. Standardized psychometric discrepancy criteria are more restrictive and perhaps less sensitive to language impairment than is clinical judgment based on a child's language performance in naturalistic contexts. This paper examines (a) differences in groups of preschool children clinically diagnosed as SLI who were and were not identified as SLI through standard psychometric discrepancy criteria, and (b) the validity of quantitative measures of mean length of utterance (MLU), syntax, and pragmatics derived from a spontaneous language sample as criteria for discriminating clinically diagnosed preschoolers from normally developing preschoolers. Spontaneous language data indicated that children clinically identified as SLI produced a significantly higher percentage of errors in spontaneous speech than normal children whether they met psychometric discrepancy criteria or not. Logistic regression analysis indicated that a combination of MLU, percent structural errors, and chronological age was the optimal subset of variables useful for predicting a clinical diagnosis of SLI. This combined criterion captured a larger proportion of the clinically identified SLI children than even the best psychometric discrepancy criteria.

[1]  I. Rapin Developmental language disorders , 1992 .

[2]  J. Johnston,et al.  Interpreting the Leiter IQ: performance profiles of young normal and language-disordered children. , 1982, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[3]  Janet A. Norris,et al.  Language Intervention within Naturalistic Environments , 1990 .

[4]  R. Tibshirani,et al.  Generalized additive models for medical research , 1986, Statistical methods in medical research.

[5]  Lois Bloom,et al.  One Word at a Time: The Use of Single Word Utterances Before Syntax , 1976 .

[6]  Eva Magnusson,et al.  Reading and spelling in language-disordered children—linguistic and metalinguistic prerequisites: Report on a longitudinal study , 1990 .

[7]  J. R. Landis,et al.  The measurement of observer agreement for categorical data. , 1977, Biometrics.

[8]  D. Aram,et al.  Clinical and research congruence in identifying children with specific language impairment. , 1993, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[9]  R. Elwood Clinical discriminations and neuropsychological tests: An appeal to bayes' theorem. , 1993, The Clinical neuropsychologist.

[10]  L. Bloom,et al.  Language development and language disorders , 1979 .

[11]  D. Aram,et al.  Very-low-birthweight children and speech and language development. , 1991, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[12]  Judith Felson Duchan,et al.  Assessing children's language in naturalistic contexts , 1983 .

[13]  E. Plante,et al.  Selection of Preschool Language Tests , 1994 .

[14]  M. Lahey Who shall be called language disordered? Some reflections and one perspective. , 1990, The Journal of speech and hearing disorders.

[15]  M. Casby The Cognitive Hypothesis and Its Influence on Speech-Language Services in Schools , 1992 .

[16]  Margaret Lahey,et al.  Language disorders and language development , 1988 .

[17]  R S Chapman,et al.  The relation between age and mean length of utterance in morphemes. , 1981, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[18]  Nickola Wolf Nelson,et al.  Childhood Language Disorders in Context: Infancy Through Adolescence , 1992 .

[19]  J. Arena,et al.  Expressive one-word picture vocabulary test , 1984 .

[20]  Preschool Children with Inadequate Communication: Developmental Language Disorder, Autism, Low IQ. Clinics in Developmental Medicine, No. 139. , 1996 .

[21]  P Tallal,et al.  Selection of children with specific language deficits. , 1981, The Journal of speech and hearing disorders.

[22]  Jon F. Miller,et al.  Assessing Language Production in Children: Experimental Procedures , 1981 .

[23]  M. J. Demetras,et al.  The identification of language impairment in the selection of specifically language-impaired subjects. , 1990, The Journal of speech and hearing disorders.

[24]  Laurence B. Leonard,et al.  Language learnability and specific language impairment in children , 1989, Applied Psycholinguistics.

[25]  R. McCauley,et al.  Psychometric review of language and articulation tests for preschool children. , 1984, The Journal of speech and hearing disorders.

[26]  M L Rice,et al.  Specific language impairment as a period of extended optional infinitive. , 1995, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[27]  D. Bishop,et al.  A prospective study of the relationship between specific language impairment, phonological disorders and reading retardation. , 1990, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.

[28]  G. Whitehurst,et al.  Practitioner review: early developmental language delay: what, if anything, should the clinician do about it? , 1994, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.

[29]  Marc E. Fey,et al.  Language intervention with young children , 1986 .