Regular and irregular inflection in different groups of bilingual children and the role of verbal short-term and verbal working memory
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/23137Dato
2021-03-22Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Bilingual children often experience difficulties with inflectional morphology. The aim of
this longitudinal study was to investigate how regularity of inflection in combination with verbal
short-term and working memory (VSTM, VWM) influences bilingual children’s performance. Data
from 231 typically developing five- to eight-year-old children were analyzed: Dutch monolingual
children (N = 45), Frisian-Dutch bilingual children (N = 106), Turkish-Dutch bilingual children
(N = 31), Tarifit-Dutch bilingual children (N = 38) and Arabic-Dutch bilingual children (N = 11).
Inflection was measured with an expressive morphology task. VSTM and VWM were measured with
a Forward and Backward Digit Span task, respectively. The results showed that, overall, children
performed more accurately at regular than irregular forms, with the smallest gap between regulars
and irregulars for monolinguals. Furthermore, this gap was smaller for older children and children
who scored better on a non-verbal intelligence measure. In bilingual children, higher accuracy at
using (irregular) inflection was predicted by a smaller cross-linguistic distance, a larger amount of
Dutch at home, and a higher level of parental education. Finally, children with better VSTM, but not
VWM, were more accurate at using regular and irregular inflection
Forlag
MDPISitering
Blom, Bosma, Hearing. Regular and irregular inflection in different groups of bilingual children and the role of verbal short-term and verbal working memory. Languages. 2021Metadata
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