Development of narratives in Tamil-speaking preschool children: A task comparison study

‘Narrative’ can be simply defined as a spoken or written account of connected events or experiences. The present study records the development of microstructure elements of narratives in 200 typically developing Tamil-speaking children aged between three years and six years and eleven months. It the...

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Main Authors: Krupa Venkatraman, V. Thiruvalluvan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-07-01
Series:Heliyon
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844021017448
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spelling doaj-a3b27a8b4b9740bea9addcb7d2beb5fa2021-08-02T04:58:08ZengElsevierHeliyon2405-84402021-07-0177e07641Development of narratives in Tamil-speaking preschool children: A task comparison studyKrupa Venkatraman0V. Thiruvalluvan1Corresponding author.; Annamalai University, Annamalai Nagar, Chidambaram, Tamil Nadu, IndiaAnnamalai University, Annamalai Nagar, Chidambaram, Tamil Nadu, India‘Narrative’ can be simply defined as a spoken or written account of connected events or experiences. The present study records the development of microstructure elements of narratives in 200 typically developing Tamil-speaking children aged between three years and six years and eleven months. It then compares their narrative productivity across two elicitation contexts: story retelling (SR) and story generation (SG). The samples thus obtained are analyzed for three narrative microstructure parameters, namely total number of words (TNW) in the narrative, mean length of utterances (MLU) and the number of utterances. The results reveal an increasing trend in all three microstructure parameters across both contexts. All three parameters are found to be quantitatively high in SR than in SG. Variation in the performance in these narrative tasks has been explained with behavioural observations from literature, cognitive architecture and a working memory model. It was found that gender differences do not follow a uniform pattern across age groups and elicitation contexts. Since the study has generated normative data for microstructure parameters of narratives, the observations can be used to analyze language deviance and help plan the narrative intervention protocol for language therapy.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844021017448NarrativesUtterancesMicrostructureCognitionStory retell and Generation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Krupa Venkatraman
V. Thiruvalluvan
spellingShingle Krupa Venkatraman
V. Thiruvalluvan
Development of narratives in Tamil-speaking preschool children: A task comparison study
Heliyon
Narratives
Utterances
Microstructure
Cognition
Story retell and Generation
author_facet Krupa Venkatraman
V. Thiruvalluvan
author_sort Krupa Venkatraman
title Development of narratives in Tamil-speaking preschool children: A task comparison study
title_short Development of narratives in Tamil-speaking preschool children: A task comparison study
title_full Development of narratives in Tamil-speaking preschool children: A task comparison study
title_fullStr Development of narratives in Tamil-speaking preschool children: A task comparison study
title_full_unstemmed Development of narratives in Tamil-speaking preschool children: A task comparison study
title_sort development of narratives in tamil-speaking preschool children: a task comparison study
publisher Elsevier
series Heliyon
issn 2405-8440
publishDate 2021-07-01
description ‘Narrative’ can be simply defined as a spoken or written account of connected events or experiences. The present study records the development of microstructure elements of narratives in 200 typically developing Tamil-speaking children aged between three years and six years and eleven months. It then compares their narrative productivity across two elicitation contexts: story retelling (SR) and story generation (SG). The samples thus obtained are analyzed for three narrative microstructure parameters, namely total number of words (TNW) in the narrative, mean length of utterances (MLU) and the number of utterances. The results reveal an increasing trend in all three microstructure parameters across both contexts. All three parameters are found to be quantitatively high in SR than in SG. Variation in the performance in these narrative tasks has been explained with behavioural observations from literature, cognitive architecture and a working memory model. It was found that gender differences do not follow a uniform pattern across age groups and elicitation contexts. Since the study has generated normative data for microstructure parameters of narratives, the observations can be used to analyze language deviance and help plan the narrative intervention protocol for language therapy.
topic Narratives
Utterances
Microstructure
Cognition
Story retell and Generation
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844021017448
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