All Stories

  1. Retrieval Practice and Word Learning by Children With Developmental Language Disorder: Does Expanding Retrieval Provide Additional Benefit?
  2. Verb Vocabulary Supports Event Probability Use in Developmental Language Disorder
  3. Sources of Misinterpretation in the Input and Their Implications for Language Intervention With English-Speaking Children
  4. Can Retrieval Practice Facilitate Verb Learning in Children With Developmental Language Disorder and Their Peers With Typical Language Development?
  5. The Neural Underpinnings of Processing Newly Taught Semantic Information: The Role of Retrieval Practice
  6. Preschool children learn new adjectives: Evidence from event-related potentials
  7. After Initial Retrieval Practice, More Retrieval Produces Better Retention Than More Study in the Word Learning of Children With Developmental Language Disorder
  8. The Effects of Frequency and Predictability on Repetition in Children With Developmental Language Disorder
  9. Adjective Learning in Young Typically Developing Children and Children With Developmental Language Disorder: A Retrieval-Based Approach
  10. Retrieval-Based Word Learning in Young Typically Developing Children and Children With Developmental Language Disorder I: The Benefits of Repeated Retrieval
  11. Retrieval-Based Word Learning in Young Typically Developing Children and Children With Development Language Disorder II: A Comparison of Retrieval Schedules
  12. Verb Variability and Morphosyntactic Priming With Typically Developing 2- and 3-Year-Olds
  13. Sensitivity to Morphosyntactic Information in Preschool Children With and Without Developmental Language Disorder: A Follow-Up Study
  14. Extending the Application of Tense and Agreement Measures: A Reply to Rispoli and Hadley (2018)
  15. An Initial Investigation of the Neural Correlates of Word Processing in Preschoolers With Specific Language Impairment
  16. Tracking the Growth of Tense and Agreement in Children With Specific Language Impairment: Differences Between Measures of Accuracy, Diversity, and Productivity
  17. Reciprocal relations between syntax and tense/agreement morphology in children’s interpretation of input: A look at children with specific language impairment
  18. The Changing View of Input in the Treatment of Children With Grammatical Deficits
  19. Sensitivity to Morphosyntactic Information in 3-Year-Old Children With Typical Language Development: A Feasibility Study
  20. A Clinical Evaluation of the Competing Sources of Input Hypothesis
  21. Specific Language Impairment
  22. Noun-related morphosyntactic difficulties in specific language impairment across languages
  23. Past Tense Production in Children With and Without Specific Language Impairment Across Germanic Languages: A Meta-Analysis
  24. Children With a History of SLI Show Reduced Sensitivity to Audiovisual Temporal Asynchrony: An ERP Study
  25. Input sources of third person singular -sinconsistency in children with and without specific language impairment
  26. Decreased Sensitivity to Long-Distance Dependencies in Children With a History of Specific Language Impairment: Electrophysiological Evidence
  27. Specific Language Impairment Across Languages
  28. The Effects of Production Demands on Grammatical Weaknesses in Specific Language Impairment: The Case of Clitic Pronouns in Italian
  29. Sentence Comprehension in Specific Language Impairment: A Task Designed to Distinguish Between Cognitive Capacity and Syntactic Complexity
  30. Alternative Tense and Agreement Morpheme Measures for Assessing Grammatical Deficits During the Preschool Period
  31. Real-Word and Nonword Repetition in Italian-Speaking Children With Specific Language Impairment: A Study of Diagnostic Accuracy
  32. The Primacy of Priming in Grammatical Learning and Intervention: A Tutorial
  33. Within-Treatment Factors as Predictors of Outcomes Following Conversational Recasting
  34. Language combinations, subtypes, and severity in the study of bilingual children with specific language impairment
  35. Theories of Language Learning and Children with Specific Language Impairment
  36. Language Disorders in the Preschool Years
  37. Early emergence as a diagnostic for innateness
  38. Specific Language Impairment as a Clinical Category
  39. Facilitating Grammatical Development: The Contribution of Pragmatics
  40. The acquisition of agglutinating languages: converging evidence from Tamil
  41. Language learnability and specific language impairment in children
  42. Lexical influences on children's early positional patterns
  43. Conversational Replies of Children with Specific Language Impairment
  44. Speech selection and modification in language-disordered children
  45. Some further comments on reduplication in child phonology
  46. Phonological deficits in children with developmental language impairment
  47. Individual differences in early child phonology
  48. Children’s Judgments of Utterance Appropriateness
  49. The Early Lexicons of Normal and Language-Disordered Children: Developmental and Training Considerations
  50. Aphasics' comprehension of contextually conveyed meaning
  51. The Phonology of Deviant Child Language
  52. Focus characteristics of single-word utterances after syntax
  53. A note on imitation and lexical acquisition
  54. Author’s Reply to M. D. Smith
  55. Modeling as a Clinical Procedure in Language Training
  56. A Preliminary View of Generalization in Language Training
  57. A Reexamination of Terms
  58. Author’s Reply
  59. The Nature of Deviant Articulation
  60. Teaching by the Rules
  61. Reply to Peterson and Butt
  62. Developmental language disorders
  63. Children’s Resolution of Pronominal Reference In Text Task
  64. Is specific language impairment a useful construct?