Procedural and Declarative Memory in Children with Developmental Disorders of Language and Literacy
Specifik språkstörning och dyslexi innebär en påtaglig försening av språk- respektive läsutvecklingen som inte har någon uppenbar orsak.
En ökad förståelse för minnesfunktioner, och deras betydelse för symptomen vid språkstörning och dyslexi, skulle kunna leda till nya och effektivare interventionsprogram för drabbade barn.
Martina Hedenius
Margareta Jennische, Jonas Persson, Michael T Ullman
Elena Plante
Uppsala universitet
2013-09-13
Procedural and Declarative Memory in Children with Developmental Disorders of Language and Literacy
Institutionen för neurovetenskap, Logopedi
Abstrakt
(Ur avhandlingens svenska sammanfattning)
Studie I och Studie II har tillsammans visat på ett samband mellan icke- språklig procedurell sekvensinlärnings förmåga och grammatiska svårigheter, respektive lässvårigheter, hos barn. I Studie III visades att dyslexi kan vara förknippat med en förstärkt förmåga till deklarativt igenkänningsminne. De tre delstudierna tyder på att det kan vara fruktbart att vidga det kliniska och pedagogiska perspektivet vid dessa diagnoser till att även omfatta aspekter av icke-språkliga inlärnings och minnesfunktioner. En ökad förståelse för minnesfunktioner, och deras betydelse för symptomen vid språkstörning och dyslexi, skulle kunna leda till nya och effektivare interventionsprogram för drabbade barn.
Procedural and Declarative Memory in Children with Developmental Disorders of Language and Literacy
The procedural deficit hypothesis (PDH) posits that a range of language, cognitive and motor impairments associated with specific language impairment (SLI) and developmental dyslexia (DD) may be explained by an underlying domain-general dysfunction of the procedural memory system. In contrast, declarative memory is hypothesized to remain intact and to play a compensatory role in the two disorders. The studies in the present thesis were designed to test this hypothesis.
Study I examined non-language procedural memory, specifically implicit sequence learning, in children with SLI. It was shown that children with poor performance on tests of grammar were impaired at consolidation of procedural memory compared to children with normal grammar. These findings support the PDH and are line with previous studies suggesting a link between grammar processing and procedural memory.
In Study II, the same implicit sequence learning paradigm was used to test procedural memory in children with DD. The DD group showed a learning profile that was similar to that of children with SLI in Study I, with a significant impairment emerging late in learning, after extended practice and including an overnight interval. Further analyses suggested that the DD impairment may not be related to overnight consolidation but to the effects of further practice beyond the initial practice session. In contrast to the predictions of the PDH, the sequence learning deficit was unrelated to phonological processing skills as assessed with a nonword repetition task.
Study III examined declarative memory in DD. The performance of the DD group was found to be not only intact, but even enhanced, compared to that of the control children. The results encourage further studies on the potential of declarative memory to compensate for the reading problems in DD.
In sum, the results lend partial support for the PDH and suggest further refinements to the theory. Collectively, the studies emphasize the importance of going beyond a narrow focus on language learning and memory functions in the characterization of the two disorders. Such a broader cognitive, motor and language approach may inform the development of future clinical and pedagogical assessment and intervention practices for SLI and DD.