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2019 journal original-research J Speech Lang Hear Res

Persistent Neurobehavioral Markers of Developmental Morphosyntax Errors in Adults

Wagley N, Perrachione TK, Ostrovskaya I, Ghosh SS, Saxler PK, Lymberis J, Wexler K, Gabrieli JDE, Kovelman I

Identifiers and access

DOI
10.1044/2019_JSLHR-19-00154
PubMed
31825709
PMC
PMC7201328
Cited by
4

Key findings

Adults (N=25) were slower and less accurate at judging sentences containing 'optional infinitive' developmental errors than non-developmental errors and showed greater bilateral inferior-frontal-gyrus activity for developmental errors in both auditory and visual modalities, suggesting persistent neural costs of finite-form processing into adulthood.

Abstract

Source: pubmed

Purpose Child language acquisition is marked by an optional infinitive period (ages 2-4 years) during which children use nonfinite (infinitival) verb forms and finite verb forms interchangeably in grammatical contexts that require finite forms. In English, children's errors include omissions of past tense /-ed/ and 3rd-person singular /-s/. This language acquisition period typically ends by the age of 4 years, but it persists in children with language impairments. It is unknown if adults still process optional infinitives differently than other kinds of morphosyntax errors. Method We compared behavior and functional brain activation during grammaticality judgments across sentences with developmental optional infinitive tense/agreement errors ("Yesterday I play the song"), nondevelopmental agreement errors ("He am tall") that do not occur in typical child language acquisition, and grammatically correct sentences. Results Adults (N = 25) were significantly slower and less accurate in judging sentences with developmental errors relative to other sentences. Sentences with developmental errors yielded greater activation in bilateral inferior frontal gyri relative to nondevelopmental error sentences in both auditory and visual modalities. Conclusions These findings suggest that the heightened computational demands for finiteness extend well beyond early childhood and continue to exert their influence on grammatical mental and brain function in adulthood.

Topics

  • speech-voice-biomarkers
  • child-development-education

Lab authors

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