Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5039114 Journal of Communication Disorders 2017 15 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Moderate to severe hearing loss in childhood does not lead to errors in adults' writing.•Morphosyntactic correctness is related to degree of hearing loss in childhood.•Vulnerabilities in the adults' spoken language production do not surface in writing.

ObjectiveTo examine whether moderate to severe congenital hearing loss (MSCHL) leads to persistent morphosyntactic problems in the written language production of adults, as it does in their spoken language production.DesignSamples of written language in Dutch were analysed for morphosyntactic correctness and syntactic complexity.Study sample20 adults with MSCHL and 10 adults with normal hearing (NH).ResultsAdults with MSCHL did not differ from adults with NH in the morphosyntactic correctness and syntactic complexity of their written utterances. Within the MSCHL group, the number of morphosyntactic errors in writing was related to the degree of hearing loss in childhood.ConclusionsAt the group level, MSCHL does not affect the morphosyntactic correctness of language produced in the written modality, in contrast to earlier observed effects on spoken language production. However, at the individual level, our data suggest that adults who acquired their language with more severe auditory limitations are more at risk of persistent problems with morphosyntax in written language production than adults with a lower degree of hearing loss in childhood.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Cognitive Neuroscience
Authors
, , , , ,