Deficits in speech perception predict language learning impairment

  1. Johannes C. Ziegler*,,
  2. Catherine Pech-Georgel,
  3. Florence George,
  4. F.-Xavier Alario*, and
  5. Christian Lorenzi§
  1. *Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Université de Provence, 13331 Marseille, France; Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de la Timone, Université de la Méditerranée, 13005 Marseille, France; and §Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Université Paris 5, Institut Universitaire de France, 75005 Paris, France
  1. Edited by Edward E. Smith, Columbia University, New York, NY (received for review May 31, 2005)

Abstract

Specific language impairment (SLI) is one of the most common childhood disorders, affecting 7% of children. These children experience difficulties in understanding and producing spoken language despite normal intelligence, normal hearing, and normal opportunities to learn language. The causes of SLI are still hotly debated, ranging from nonlinguistic deficits in auditory perception to high-level deficits in grammar. Here, we show that children with SLI have poorer-than-normal consonant identification when measured in ecologically valid conditions of stationary or fluctuating masking noise. The deficits persisted even in comparison with a younger group of normally developing children who were matched for language skills. This finding points to a fundamental deficit. Information transmission of all phonetic features (voicing, place, and manner) was impaired, although the deficits were strongest for voicing (e.g., difference between/b/and/p/). Children with SLI experienced perfectly normal “release from masking” (better identification in fluctuating than in stationary noise), which indicates a central deficit in feature extraction rather than deficits in low-level, temporal, and spectral auditory capacities. We further showed that speech identification in noise predicted language impairment to a great extent within the group of children with SLI and across all participants. Previous research might have underestimated this important link, possibly because speech perception has typically been investigated in optimal listening conditions using non-speech material. The present study suggests that children with SLI learn language deviantly because they inefficiently extract and manipulate speech features, in particular, voicing. This result offers new directions for the fast diagnosis and remediation of SLI.

Footnotes

  • To whom correspondence should be addressed at: Laboratoire de Psychologie Cognitive, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Université de Provence, Case 66, 3 Place Victor Hugo, 13331 Marseille Cedex 3, France. E-mail: ziegler{at}up.univ-mrs.fr.

  • Author contributions: J.C.Z. and C.L. designed research; C.P.-G. and F.G. performed research; F.-X.A. analyzed data; and J.C.Z. and C.L. wrote the paper.

  • This paper was submitted directly (Track II) to the PNAS office.

  • Abbreviations: SLI, specific language impairment; A-match, age-matched; L-match, language-matched; VCV, vowel–consonant–vowel; AM, amplitude-modulated; IQ, intelligence quotient.

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