Memory Span and Narrative Skills – Where’s the Connection? Line Engel Clasen, Kristine Jensen de López & Hanne Bruun Søndergaard Knudsen University of.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Reading. 1: Is developing an interest in books Scale points 1 – 3 are based on the childrens achievement in their preferred language Looking for child.
Advertisements

Complex Experimental Designs
Psychometric Properties of a New Measure to Differentiate the Autism Spectrum from Schizoid Personality Disorder Traits Presented by Peter D. Marle, BA.
LIST QUESTIONS – COMPARISONS BETWEEN MODES AND WAVES Making Connections is a study of ten disadvantaged US urban communities, funded by the Annie E. Casey.
Stephanie Fanale Brenda Wilson, Ph.D, CCC-SLP Eastern Illinois University Research supported by an undergraduate research grant at Eastern Illinois University.
Examining the Relationship Between Confrontational Naming Tasks & Discourse Production in Aphasia Leila D. Luna & Gerasimos Fergadiotis Portland State.
Infant & Toddler Connection of Virginia 1 Case Study: KeAsia’s Annual Assessment Sandi Harrington, MA Norfolk Infant Development Program.
Passive comprehension by Slovak typically and atypically developing children Master thesis in psychology, Author: Radka Antalíková, Supervisor: Kristine.
Measuring Referring Expressions in a Story Context Phyllis Schneider, Speech Pathology & Audiology, University of Alberta Denyse Hayward, University of.
The Relationship Between Preschool Executive Function Skills and Oral Narrative Skills By: Kathleen Trainor.
The Effects of Achievement Priming on Expectations and Performance Kathryn Raso Team 14 PSY 321.
Nonword Repetition and Sentence Repetition as Clinical Markers of SLI: The Case of Cantonese Stokes, F. S., Wong, M.Y.A., Fletcher, P., & Leonard, B. L.
Background  Bilingual children with TLD often perform below monolingual age peers on standardized tests, with over-identification of SLI in bilinguals.
Mean Length of Utterance (MLU)  A measure of language ability A Measure of Language Ability.
 Much of daily communication takes the form of story narratives.  Story comprehension and production depends on a logical sequence of cognitively-based.
1 Attention and Inhibition in Bilingual Children: evidence from the dimensional change card sort Task By: Ellen Bialystok and Michelle M.Martin.
The Effects of Increased Cognitive Demands on the Written Discourse Ability of Young Adolescents Ashleigh Elaine Zumwalt Eastern Illinois University.
Minnesota Manual of Accommodations for Students with Disabilities Training Guide
CORRELATIO NAL RESEARCH METHOD. The researcher wanted to determine if there is a significant relationship between the nursing personnel characteristics.
Review of three tests of children’s narrative ability [Poster presented at Narratives, Intervention, and Literacy conference, Paris, France, Sept. 2012]
The Effect of Predisposing Factors and Concussion Rate on DIII College Football Players: A Retrospective Study Jon Purvis, Robert Blume, Jenna Chinburg,
The possible effects of target language learning prior to secondary dual language school studies by Anna Várkuti 10th Summer School of Psycholinguistics.
Linguistic Demands of Preschool Cognitive Assessments Glenna Bieno, Megan Eparvier, Anne Kulinski Faculty Mentor: Mary Beth Tusing Method We employed three.
Background Info Opportunity for people to visually see their brainwave patterns through visual and audio cues on the computer Games and activities are.
Pilot: Customizing a Commercially Available Digital Game to Assess Cognitive Function William C. M. Grenhart, John F. Sprufera, Jason C. Allaire, & Anne.
Barbara A. Wilson, Eve Greenfield, Linda Clare, Alan Baddeley, Janet Cockburn, Peter Watson, Robyn Tate, Sara Sopena, Rory Nannery & John Crawford (2008)
Step Up To: Psychology by John J. Schulte, Psy.D. Psychology, Eighth Edition By David G. Myers Worth Publishers (2007)
Intelligence Smart, How? Different Strokes Take a Test How do we measure it? Where do you get yours?
Implication of Gender and Perception of Self- Competence on Educational Aspiration among Graduates in Taiwan Wan-Chen Hsu and Chia- Hsun Chiang Presenter.
TEMPLATE DESIGN © Mood dependent memory and the conditions under which it occurs. Melissa Daly, & Dr. Howard Smith, Department.
Near East University Department of English Language Teaching Advanced Research Techniques Correlational Studies Abdalmonam H. Elkorbow.
Statistics for Education Research Lecture 5 Tests on Two Means: Two Independent Samples Independent-Sample t Tests Instructor: Dr. Tung-hsien He
The Sex and Gender Role Differences in Exploration and Curiosity T. Beth Carroll Crystal Ann Fravel Frank White Amy R. Childress Radford University.
+ Asperger’s Syndrome and Assistive Technology. + Introduction This study was done on children with Autism Spectrum Conditions (ASC). Children with ASC.
 Background and Motivation of this Study  Statement of the Problem  Research Questions  Significance of the Study  Definition of Terms  Organization.
BY DR ZAINAB ABDULZAEEZ UMAR DEPARTMENT OF FAMILY MEDICINE AMINU KANO TEACHING HOSPITAL.
Myles Lynch, University of New Hampshire Boyd Hegarty, University of New Hampshire Nate Trauntvein, University of New Hampshire Jonathan Plucker, University.
Gender Schema Influence Analogical Problem Solving and Memory in Preschool-Aged Children. Gender Schema Influence Analogical Problem Solving and Memory.
Week 4. InvestigationMethodJustification Is it better to learn to drive on an intensive 1 week course of 40 hours or to learn in 20 2-hour lessons that.
Examination of Public Perceptions of Four Types of Child Sexual Abuse Prevention Programs Brandon Kopp Raymond Miltenberger.
Attainment Peter Gorrie, QIO September 2014.
INTRODUCTION Previous literature suggests that schizophrenia is characterized by a disturbed, fragmented and/or poorly elaborated personal identity (e.g.,
The Critical Period for Language Acquisition: Evidence from Second Language Learning CATHERINE E. SNOW AND MARIAN HOEFNAGEL-HÖHLE UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM.
Parent Guide to Using Lexile Scores Provided on the Georgia Milestones Individual Score Reports Using the Lexile Score to support the growth of your child’s.
Does Anxiety Vary by Gender and Race During Adolescence? Alyson Cavanaugh, Kelly A. Cheeseman, and Christine McCauley Ohannessian University of Delaware.
 By preschool age, boys and girls show marked differences on a number of emotional, social, and behavioral outcomes (Ruble et al., 2006). Some gender.
Criteria for selection of a data collection instrument. 1.Practicality of the instrument: -Concerns its cost and appropriateness for the study population.
Gender Differences in Buffering Stress Responses in Same-Sex Friend Dyads Sydney N. Pauling, Jenalee R. Doom, & Megan R. Gunnar Institute of Child Development,
Language Intervention and the Effect on Passive Comprehension – A pilot-study Lone Sundahl Olsen, ph.D. Student, University of Aalborg, Denmark Master.
J UMPING AROUND AND LEAVING THINGS OUT : A PROFILE OF THE NARRATIVES ABILITIES OF CHILDREN WITH SPECIFIC LANGUAGE IMPAIRMENT M IRANDA, A., M C C ABE, A.,
 1,001 adolescent boys (47%) and girls (53%)  Fairly diverse: 58% Caucasian; 23% African American,12% Hispanic, 2% Asian, 5% Other  Age Range:
Test of Early Reading Ability-3 (TERA-3) By: Jenna Ferrara.
◦ th and 11 th grade high school students (54% girls) ◦ 63% Caucasian; 24% African-American; 13% Hispanic; remaining were Asian or “other” ◦ Mean.
General and Feeding Specific Behavior Problems in a Community Sample of Children Amy J. Majewski, Kathryn S. Holman & W. Hobart Davies University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.
 Individual differences and language interdependence: a study of sequential bilingual development in Spanish-English preschool children.
A Validation of the Sixteen Personality Factor Impression Management Scale and Normative Data for Assessment of Defensiveness in Law Enforcement Applicants.
The influence of forgetting rate on complex span and academic performance Debbora Hall, Chris Jarrold, John Towse and Amy Zarandi.
Language Switching Frequency in Bilinguals is Inconsistently Linked to Executive Functioning Hunter Johnson 1, Oliver Sawi 1,2, Kenneth Paap 1 ; 1 San.
Numeracy & Quantitative Methods: Level 7 – Advanced Quantitative Analysis.
The Clinical Utility of the LANSE- A and LANSE-C Jennifer L. Harrison, M.A., Megan Pollock, M.A., Amy Mouanoutoua, M.A. Ashley Brimager, M.A., & Paul C.
Association of Cognitive Outcomes and Response Status in Late Life Depression: A 12 Month Longitudinal Study David Bickford B.A., Alana Kivowitz B.A.,
Regulative support for collaborative scientific inquiry learning Presenter: Hou, Ming-Hsien Professor: Ming-Puu Chen Date: August 19, 2008 Manlove, S.,
Late talkers (Delayed Onset)
Working-memory: is there a bilingual advantage?
The Secure Base Phenomenon in Preschoolers: Child Secure Base Behavior and Narratives about Using Mom as a Secure Base. Germán Posada & Garene Kaloustian.
Bowden, Shores, & Mathias (2006): Failure to Replicate or Just Failure to Notice. Does Effort Still Account for More Variance in Neuropsychological Test.
Key research: Van Leeuwen et al
Oliver Sawi1,2, Hunter Johnson1, Kenneth Paap1;
Learner motivation and individual differences in language learning Dr Louise Courtney Professor Suzanne Graham University of Reading Siena July 2017.
Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function (BRIEF2): Analyzing and Interpreting Ratings from Multiple Raters Melissa A. Messer1, MHS, Jennifer A.
Presentation transcript:

Memory Span and Narrative Skills – Where’s the Connection? Line Engel Clasen, Kristine Jensen de López & Hanne Bruun Søndergaard Knudsen University of Aalborg, Denmark Introduction Language and cognition are two interesting and perhaps linked aspects of child development. Recent studies support that executive functions are deficient in monolingual-language- impaired children (Henry, Messer & Nash, 2011). To explore this area, and shed light on the possible association between language and executive functions in typically developing children, we investigated the connection between children’s narrative skills (telling and retelling tasks) in the Fox and Bus story, and their memory span measured on an Odd-one-out task (Henry, 2001). Prediction: we predict a stronger correlation between the Bus story retelling task and memory span than between the Fox story telling task and memory span. Results Method Participants: 60 Danish typically developing monolingual children, 30 girls, 30 boys, aged 6 to 8 years (mean age in month = 90,4, SD= 10,2). Materials: Bus story plus COST materials from respectively WG 2: Fox story, and WG 4: Odd-one-out. Procedure: the test materials were administrated to each child during school hours in the following order: Odd-one-out, Fox Story, Bus Story Coding: For the Odd-one-out two substantial scores were calculated, first the child was credited a score for each correct remembered item (possible score range 0-24), second the child’s span score – the number of spans passed – was calculated (possible score range 0-6). Both narrative tasks were coded for micro structure calculated by mean length of the five longest sentences (A5LS), and macro structure assessed by story grammar containing the overall categories: setting, initiating event, goal, attempt Discussion Coding issues: The fact that this study shows that memory span has a higher correlation with a telling than a retelling narrative task could perhaps originate in coding issues: It is possible that the complexity of the story grammar of the two stories is not identical, thereby giving different results for the two set of scores for story grammar. BiSLI: The results from this study indicate that test materials for narratives are very sensitive – even in a within subjects analysis. The results therefore underline the need for balancing and controlling test materials when testing bilingual children. When using two narrative tasks, one cannot be prompting better scores than the other, since this could cause different results that is do to the method and not a difference in language abilities. Diagnostics: That working memory correlates differently with different measurements for narratives is also worth noting as regards to the development of clinical tools for identifying children with SLI. All of these considerations call for methodological awareness in developing appropriate and valid testing tools. References Odd-one-out: L. Henry, D. Messer and G. Nash (2011), L. Henry (2001), Bus story: C. Renfrew (2010), Fox story: COST WG 2 Thanks to COST working groups 2 and 4 for development of materials, and to AAU students Camilla, Maj and Mette for collection of data Correlations: We predicted that the correlations between working memory and narrative skills would be stronger for the Bus retelling task than the Fox telling task. Interestingly, the correlations were opposite of the expected, as the correlation table beneath shows a higher, positive and significant correlation between Fox story grammar and both scores in Odd-one- out than between Odd-one-out and Bus story grammar. Total number of difficult words remembered in Bus story does however have a significant correlation with total number of correct remembered items in Odd-one-out. It is also noteworthy that none of the correlations are higher than.334., indicating a rather week correlation between memory span and narrative skills. Narrative tasks: Table 1 above shows the means on all of the narrative tasks included in the study. The two boxplots at the top shows the three age groups’ scores on macro structure for respectively Fox story and Bus story. Story Grammar for Fox showed a significant effect of age (F = 3.23, p =.047). Posthoc Bonferroni tests showed a non-significant effect between all of the age groups. For Bus story a one-way ANOVA showed a non significant overall effect of age. The buttom boxplot shows the groups’ scores on micro structure for Fox and Bus story. For Fox A5LS a one-way ANOVA showed an overall significant effect of age (F = 9.38, p >.01). Posthoc Bonferroni tests showed significance for all three age groups. For A5LS for Bus story a one-way ANOVA showed no significance. Odd-one-out: The boxplot on the right shows how the span scores of the three age groups are distributed A one-way ANOVA showed an overall significant effect of age (F = 8.80, p =.01). Posthoc Bonferroni tests showed a significant difference between the span of the 6 year-olds and the 8-year-olds (p =.002), but not for the remaining age groups. A Pearsons R shows a significant correlation (.381) between age and span score. An independent t-test showed no gender differences for either Odd-one-out scores. * p < 0.05; ** p <0.01