Do children with Williams syndrome really have good vocabulary knowledge? Methods for comparing cognitive and linguistic abilities in developmental disorders
Authors:
Jon Brock a;
Christopher Jarrold b;
Emily K. Farran c;
Glynis Laws b;
Deborah M. Riby d
| Affiliations: | a Macquarie Centre for Cognitive Sciences, Macquarie University, Australia |
| b University of Bristol, UK | |
| c University of Reading, UK | |
| d University of Stirling, UK |
DOI:
10.1080/02699200701541433
Publication Frequency:
12 issues per year
Subjects:
Communication Disorders;
Rehabilitation Medicine;
Formats available:
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Also incorporating: Journal of Multilingual Communication Disorders
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Abstract
The comparison of cognitive and linguistic skills in individuals with developmental disorders is fraught with methodological and psychometric difficulties. In this paper, we illustrate some of these issues by comparing the receptive vocabulary knowledge and non-verbal reasoning abilities of 41 children with Williams syndrome, a genetic disorder in which language abilities are often claimed to be relatively strong. Data from this group were compared with data from typically developing children, children with Down syndrome, and children with non-specific learning difficulties using a number of approaches including comparison of age-equivalent scores, matching, analysis of covariance, and regression-based standardization. Across these analyses children with Williams syndrome consistently demonstrated relatively good receptive vocabulary knowledge, although this effect appeared strongest in the oldest children.
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| Keywords: Williams syndrome; receptive vocabulary; cognitive skills; methodology |
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