Agreeing to disagree: Deaf and hearing children's awareness of subject-verb number agreement

被引:5
|
作者
Breadmore, Helen L. [1 ]
Krott, Andrea [1 ]
Olson, Andrew C. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Birmingham, Sch Psychol, Birmingham B15 2TT, W Midlands, England
基金
英国医学研究理事会; 英国经济与社会研究理事会;
关键词
Deaf; Literacy; Reading; Morphology; Grammar; MORPHOLOGICAL AWARENESS; PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS; BRAIN POTENTIALS; WRITTEN FRENCH; COMPREHENSION; LANGUAGE; SLI; ACQUISITION; IMPAIRMENT; PERCEPTION;
D O I
10.1080/17470218.2013.818702
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
This study investigated deaf adolescents' implicit and explicit awareness of subject-verb number agreement. In Experiment 1, a self-paced reading task, the reading times of deaf and hearing children (matched for reading and chronological age, mean=8;3 and 13;10 years) increased when sentences contained disagreeing subject-verb number markers. However, deaf adolescents' slowing occurred later in the sentence than it did in both groups of hearing children. The same deaf adolescents were unable to detect and correct subject-verb agreement errors in Experiment 2, whereas both groups of hearing children performed well on this task. Thus, deaf adolescents demonstrated implicit awareness of agreement in the absence of explicit knowledge. Moreover, this nascent awareness was below that expected on the basis of their (substantially delayed) reading ability. Therefore, grammatical difficulties could be a significant impediment to deaf children's literacy. Future research should examine whether this is a result of late or incomplete learning of English, bilingualism, or another factor.
引用
收藏
页码:474 / 498
页数:25
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Deaf and hearing children's plural noun spelling
    Breadmore, Helen L.
    Olson, Andrew C.
    Krott, Andrea
    QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2012, 65 (11) : 2169 - 2192
  • [22] Asymmetries in the acquisition of subject-verb agreement in Dutch: Evidence from comprehension and production
    Verhagen, Josje
    Blom, Elma
    FIRST LANGUAGE, 2014, 34 (04) : 315 - 335
  • [23] Brain response to subject-verb agreement during grammatical priming
    Brunelliere, Angele
    BRAIN RESEARCH, 2011, 1372 : 70 - 80
  • [24] Measuring Phonological Awareness in Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing Children
    Webb, Mi-Young L.
    Lederberg, Amy R.
    JOURNAL OF SPEECH LANGUAGE AND HEARING RESEARCH, 2014, 57 (01): : 131 - 142
  • [25] Language activation in dual language schools: the development of subject-verb agreement in the English and Spanish of heritage speaker children
    Goldin, Michele
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BILINGUAL EDUCATION AND BILINGUALISM, 2022, 25 (08) : 3046 - 3067
  • [26] The relative contributions of speechreading and vocabulary to deaf and hearing children's reading ability
    Kyle, Fiona Elizabeth
    Campbell, Ruth
    MacSweeney, Mairead
    RESEARCH IN DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES, 2016, 48 : 13 - 24
  • [27] Effects of semantic integration on subject-verb agreement: evidence from Dutch
    Veenstra, Alma
    Acheson, Daniel J.
    Bock, Kathryn
    Meyer, Antje S.
    LANGUAGE COGNITION AND NEUROSCIENCE, 2014, 29 (03) : 355 - 380
  • [28] Comprehension of Infrequent Subject-Verb Agreement Forms: Evidence From French-Learning Children
    Legendre, Geraldine
    Goyet, Louise
    Nazzi, Thierry
    Barriere, Isabelle
    CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 2010, 81 (06) : 1859 - 1875
  • [29] Being a heritage speaker matters: the role of markedness in subject-verb person agreement in Italian
    Di Pisa, Grazia
    Pereira Soares, Sergio Miguel
    Rothman, Jason
    Marinis, Theodoros
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2024, 15
  • [30] Where agreement merges with disagreement: fMRI evidence of subject-verb integration
    Quinones, Ileana
    Molinaro, Nicola
    Mancini, Simona
    Andres Hernandez-Cabrera, Juan
    Carreiras, Manuel
    NEUROIMAGE, 2014, 88 : 188 - 201