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Storkel,
H.
L., Maekawa, J., &
Purpose:
The purpose of this study was to differentiate the effect of
phonotactic
probability from that of neighborhood density on a vocabulary probe
administered to preschool children with or without a phonological
delay.
Method: Twenty preschool
children with functional phonological delays and 34 preschool children
with
typical language development completed a 121 item vocabulary probe in
both an
expressive and receptive response format. Words on the vocabulary probe
orthogonally varied on phonotactic probability and neighborhood density
but
were matched on age-of-acquisition, word frequency, word length,
semantic set
size, concreteness, familiarity, and imagability.
Results: Results showed an
interaction between phonotactic probability and neighborhood density
with
variation across groups. Specifically, the optimal conditions for
typically
developing children were rare phonotactic probability with sparse
neighborhoods
and common phonotactic probability with dense neighborhoods. In
contrast, only
rare phonotactic probability with sparse neighborhoods was optimal for
children
with phonological delays.
Conclusions: Rare sound
sequences and sparse neighborhoods may facilitate triggering of word
learning
for typically developing children and children with phonological delays. In contrast, common sound sequences and dense
neighborhoods may facilitate configuration and engagement for typically
developing children but not children with phonological delays due to
their
weaker phonological and/or lexical representations.
For a copy of the complete article please email wrdlrng.mail.ku.edu
with the article title and authors.