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Journal of Speech and Hearing Disorders Vol.55 118-123 February 1990.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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The Language of Children with Spina Bifida and Hydrocephalus

Meeting Task Demands and Mastering Syntax

Karen Byrne 1, Leonard Abbeduto 2, and Penelope Brooks 1

1 Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN
2 University of Wisconsin-Madison

Children with hydrocephalus are thought to exhibit deficiencies in their linguistic performance, including the production of numerous off-topic utterances and semantically immature responses to linguistically posed problems (e.g., questions, word definitions). The hydrocephalic children included in many previous studies, however, have been mentally retarded. We sought to determine whether these language problems also characterized intellectually average children with hydrocephalus. A second purpose was to evaluate the hypothesis that the language problems of hydrocephalic children occur predominantly on tasks with high cognitive or linguistic demands. A third purpose was to reexamine the claim that despite their semantic-pragmatic deficiencies, the syntax of hydrocephalic children is age appropriate. Our hydrocephalic subjects dealt with the semantic-pragmatic requirements of linguistically posed problems in an age-appropriate manner, and although their performance on these problems declined as task demands increased, the decline was no more than that seen for nondisabled age-matches. The hydrocephalic children did not differ significantly from nondisabled age-matches on measures of productive syntactic maturity.

Key Words: hydrocephalus • spina bifida • semantics • syntax • task complexity

Submitted on January 3, 1989
Accepted on May 16, 1989







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