In:Language Acquisition across Linguistic and Cognitive Systems
Edited by Michèle Kail and Maya Hickmann †
[Language Acquisition and Language Disorders 52] 2010
► pp. 67–87
Chapter 4. Language acquisition in developmental disorders
Published online: 15 December 2010
https://doi.org/10.1075/lald.52.06tho
https://doi.org/10.1075/lald.52.06tho
In this chapter, I review recent research into language acquisition in developmental disorders, and the light that these findings shed on the nature of language acquisition in typically developing children. Disorders considered include Specific Language Impairment, autism, Down syndrome, and Williams syndrome. I argue that disorders of language should be construed in terms of differences in the constraints that shape the learning process, rather than in terms of the normal system with components missing or malfunctioning. I outline the integrative nature of this learning process and how properties such as redundancy and compensation may be key characteristics of learning systems with atypical constraints. These ideas, as well as the new methodologies now being used to study variations in pathways of language acquisition, are illustrated with case studies from Williams syndrome and Specific Language Impairment.
Cited by (5)
Cited by five other publications
Romero-Rivas, Carlos, Sara Rodríguez-Cuadrado, Lucía Sabater, Pablo Rodríguez Gómez, Irene Hidalgo de la Guía, Eva M. Moreno & Elena Garayzábal Heinze
Shevchuk-Kliuzheva, Olha & Marzena Błasiak-Tytuła
Kail, Michèle & Philippe Bonnet
Dockrell, Julie E. & Chloë R. Marshall
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