Cognitive flexibility in children with Developmental Language Disorder: Drawing of nonexistent objects
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/23470Dato
2021-06-17Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Cognitive flexibility is the ability to adapt thoughts and behaviors to new environments. Previous
studies investigating cognitive flexibility in children with Developmental Language Disorder
(DLD) present contradictory findings. In the current study, cognitive flexibility was assessed in 5-
and 6-year-old preschoolers with DLD (n = 23) and peers with typical development (TD; n = 50)
using a nonexistent object drawing (NEOD) task. The children were asked to draw a nonexistent
man and a nonexistent house. The children with DLD did not differ from their peers with TD on
simple category changes, which were comprised of changes in the size or shape of parts of the
object, change of the whole shape of the object, and deletion of parts of the object. Nevertheless,
children with DLD made fewer more complex, high-level category changes, which included samecategory insertions, position exchange of object’s parts, and cross-category insertions. The difference between DLD and TD on high-level category changes was related to differences between
the two groups in verbal short-term memory and inhibition. Furthermore, children with DLD
made no changes to their original drawings of an existing man and house more often than their
peers with TD. It is concluded that children with DLD aged 5–6 years show less flexibility on the
NEOD task than age-matched children with TD. This difference in cognitive flexibility may be
related to lower levels of verbal short-term memory and inhibition ability of children with DLD,
or to different use of these cognitive skills on the NEOD task.
Forlag
ElsevierSitering
Blom, Berke, Shaya, Adi-Japha. Cognitive flexibility in children with Developmental Language Disorder: Drawing of nonexistent objects. Journal of Communication Disorders. 2021;93:1-13Metadata
Vis full innførselSamlinger
Copyright 2021 The Author(s)