Abstract

We examined whether children with developmental language disorder (DLD) differed from their peers with typical development (TD) in the degree to which they encode information about a talker’s mouth shape into long-term phonemic representations. Children watched a talker’s face and listened to rare changes from [i] to [u] or the reverse. In the neutral condition, the talker’s face had a closed mouth throughout. In the audiovisual violation condition, the mouth shape always matched the frequent vowel, even when the rare vowel was played. We hypothesized that in the neutral condition no long-term audiovisual memory traces for speech sounds would be activated. Therefore, the neural response elicited by deviants would reflect only a violation of the observed audiovisual sequence. In contrast, we expected that in the audiovisual violation condition, a long-term memory trace for the speech sound/lip configuration typical for the frequent vowel would be activated. In this condition then, the neural response elicited by rare sound changes would reflect a violation of not only observed audiovisual patterns but also of a long-term memory representation for how a given vowel looks when articulated. Children pressed a response button whenever they saw a talker’s face assume a silly expression. We found that in children with TD, rare auditory changes produced a significant mismatch negativity (MMN) event-related potential (ERP) component over the posterior scalp in the audiovisual violation condition but not in the neutral condition. In children with DLD, no MMN was present in either condition. Rare vowel changes elicited a significant P3 in both groups and conditions, indicating that all children noticed auditory changes. Our results suggest that children with TD, but not children with DLD, incorporate visual information into long-term phonemic representations and detect violations in audiovisual phonemic congruency even when they perform a task that is unrelated to phonemic processing.

Highlights

  • We hypothesized that if children with developmental language disorder (DLD) differed from their peers with typical development (TD) in the integration of visual and auditory components of speech sounds, we should see a reduction in the mismatch negativity (MMN) component in the DLD group to rare changes compared with the TD group

  • There was a main effect of condition, with less positive voltage in the AV violation condition, and there was a group-bycondition interaction

  • The main effect of hemisphere was present, with the MMN measurement being less positive over the right as compared to the left and midline sites and less positive over the left compared to the midline sites

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Summary

Introduction

We expected that in blocks in which the talker’s lip shape matched the frequent vowel, a long-term memory trace for the speech sound/lip configuration typical for that vowel would be activated In these blocks the neural response elicited by infrequent sound changes would reflect a violation of block-specific audiovisual patterns (i.e., the repeated lip shape and sound combination) and of a long-term memory representation for how a given vowel looks when articulated. We hypothesized that if children with DLD differed from their peers with TD in the integration of visual (lip shape) and auditory (heard vowel) components of speech sounds, we should see a reduction in the MMN component in the DLD group to rare changes compared with the TD group. If groups differed only in blocks with the articulating mouth, the data would point to a more specific deficit in incorporating visual features into long-term phonemic representations

Participants
Screening Measures
Design
ERP Measures
Statistical Analysis
Behavioral and ERP Results
Regressions
Discussion
Limitations and Future
Full Text
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