Comprehension of novel metaphor in young children with Developmental Language Disorder

Background and aims Difficulties with aspects of morphosyntax, phonology and/or vocabulary are the hallmark of Development Language Disorder (DLD). Yet, little is known about the linguistic-pragmatic abilities of young children with DLD. Previous studies suggest that children with DLD are experienci...

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Main Authors: Daniela Bühler, Alexandra Perovic, Nausicaa Pouscoulous
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2018-12-01
Series:Autism & Developmental Language Impairments
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2396941518817229
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spelling doaj-9b688e27df984a9f917eb282d5f09aa62021-04-02T14:06:47ZengSAGE PublishingAutism & Developmental Language Impairments2396-94152018-12-01310.1177/2396941518817229Comprehension of novel metaphor in young children with Developmental Language DisorderDaniela BühlerAlexandra PerovicNausicaa PouscoulousBackground and aims Difficulties with aspects of morphosyntax, phonology and/or vocabulary are the hallmark of Development Language Disorder (DLD). Yet, little is known about the linguistic-pragmatic abilities of young children with DLD. Previous studies suggest that children with DLD are experiencing difficulties with idioms, sayings and slang expressions, often interpreting them in a literal or unconventional fashion. However, it is unclear whether this is caused by difficulties to make pragmatic inferences in general or whether it stems from their semantic abilities. We therefore investigated novel metaphor understanding in young children with and without DLD. Methods We assessed novel metaphor comprehension using a reference assignment task with 15 children with DLD diagnoses (ages 42–49 months) as well as typically developing peers matched on chronological age (n = 15) and on language (n = 15). Results Children with DLD performed worse than their age-matched peers but in a comparable manner to the (younger) language-matched typically developing children. Performance was not related to non-verbal intelligence in the children with DLD. Conclusion The findings indicate that young children with DLD have difficulties with metaphor comprehension but also suggest that these difficulties are in line with their general language difficulties and linked to their overall linguistic competence rather than reflecting additional specific issues with deriving pragmatic inferences. Implications Our study adds to a growing body of literature showing that children with low language abilities are also likely to display more difficulties in understanding figurative language independently of any other symptomatology of their clinical diagnosis. It also supports the argument that deficits in the pragmatic domain are a secondary impairment rather than a core deficit in children with DLD. Nonetheless, children with DLD do show difficulties in understanding metaphors. Understanding figurative language is necessary for everyday communication and should therefore be targeted alongside traditional treatments by clinicians treating children with DLD.https://doi.org/10.1177/2396941518817229
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daniela Bühler
Alexandra Perovic
Nausicaa Pouscoulous
spellingShingle Daniela Bühler
Alexandra Perovic
Nausicaa Pouscoulous
Comprehension of novel metaphor in young children with Developmental Language Disorder
Autism & Developmental Language Impairments
author_facet Daniela Bühler
Alexandra Perovic
Nausicaa Pouscoulous
author_sort Daniela Bühler
title Comprehension of novel metaphor in young children with Developmental Language Disorder
title_short Comprehension of novel metaphor in young children with Developmental Language Disorder
title_full Comprehension of novel metaphor in young children with Developmental Language Disorder
title_fullStr Comprehension of novel metaphor in young children with Developmental Language Disorder
title_full_unstemmed Comprehension of novel metaphor in young children with Developmental Language Disorder
title_sort comprehension of novel metaphor in young children with developmental language disorder
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Autism & Developmental Language Impairments
issn 2396-9415
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Background and aims Difficulties with aspects of morphosyntax, phonology and/or vocabulary are the hallmark of Development Language Disorder (DLD). Yet, little is known about the linguistic-pragmatic abilities of young children with DLD. Previous studies suggest that children with DLD are experiencing difficulties with idioms, sayings and slang expressions, often interpreting them in a literal or unconventional fashion. However, it is unclear whether this is caused by difficulties to make pragmatic inferences in general or whether it stems from their semantic abilities. We therefore investigated novel metaphor understanding in young children with and without DLD. Methods We assessed novel metaphor comprehension using a reference assignment task with 15 children with DLD diagnoses (ages 42–49 months) as well as typically developing peers matched on chronological age (n = 15) and on language (n = 15). Results Children with DLD performed worse than their age-matched peers but in a comparable manner to the (younger) language-matched typically developing children. Performance was not related to non-verbal intelligence in the children with DLD. Conclusion The findings indicate that young children with DLD have difficulties with metaphor comprehension but also suggest that these difficulties are in line with their general language difficulties and linked to their overall linguistic competence rather than reflecting additional specific issues with deriving pragmatic inferences. Implications Our study adds to a growing body of literature showing that children with low language abilities are also likely to display more difficulties in understanding figurative language independently of any other symptomatology of their clinical diagnosis. It also supports the argument that deficits in the pragmatic domain are a secondary impairment rather than a core deficit in children with DLD. Nonetheless, children with DLD do show difficulties in understanding metaphors. Understanding figurative language is necessary for everyday communication and should therefore be targeted alongside traditional treatments by clinicians treating children with DLD.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2396941518817229
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