Connective processing by bilingual children and monolinguals with specific language impairment: distinct profiles

Publication date

2017

Authors

Mak, PimISNI 0000000043126309
Tribushinina, ElenaISNI 000000012249242X
Lomako, J.
Gagarina, N.
Abrosova, E.
Sanders, TedORCID 0000-0001-8212-7336ISNI 0000000107870699

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Document Type

Article
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taverne

Abstract

Production studies show that both Russian-speaking children with specific language impairment (SLI) and bilingual children for whom Russian is a non-dominant language have difficulty distinguishing between the near-synonymous connectives i ‘and’ and a ‘and/but’. I is a preferred connective when reference is maintained, whereas a is normally used for reference shift. We report an eye-tracking experiment comparing connective processing by Russian-speaking monolinguals with typical language development (TLD) with that of Russian– Dutch bilinguals and Russian-speaking monolinguals with SLI (age 5–6). The results demonstrate that the processing profiles of monolinguals with TLD and bilinguals are similar: both groups use connective semantics immediately for predicting further discourse. In contrast, children with SLI do not show sensitivity to these semantic differences. Despite similar production profiles, bilinguals and monolinguals with SLI are clearly different in connective processing. We discuss the implications of these results for the possible causes of the errors in the two populations.

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Citation

Mak, W M, Tribushinina, E, Lomako, J, Gagarina, N, Abrosova, E & Sanders, T J M 2017, 'Connective processing by bilingual children and monolinguals with specific language impairment : distinct profiles', Journal of Child Language, vol. 44, no. 2, pp. 329-345. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0305000915000860