Exploring cognitive predictors of language in children with developmental language disorder: The role of nonverbal IQ, working memory, implicit statistical learning, and speed of automatization

Blake A, Dabrowska E, Riches N (2025)


Publication Language: English

Publication Type: Journal article

Publication year: 2025

Journal

Book Volume: 116

Article Number: 106541

DOI: 10.1016/j.jcomdis.2025.106541

Abstract

Children with developmental language disorder (DLD) have varied strengths and difficulties in both language and cognition but we do not yet have a comprehensive understanding as to how these abilities are interrelated. In this study, we explore performance in language typical children and children with DLD to evaluate how different areas of nonverbal cognition predict linguistic outcomes. We investigate nonverbal intelligence, working memory, implicit statistical learning, and the speed of automatization. 77 children (54 language typical children and 23 children with DLD), aged between 6;9 and 10;8 years, completed a battery of cognitive and language tasks. Our results show between-group differences in both language and cognitive abilities. We propose a cumulative risk model, suggesting that important predictors of language in children with DLD are a combination of nonverbal working memory, nonverbal intelligence, and the speed of automatization.

Authors with CRIS profile

Additional Organisation(s)

Involved external institutions

How to cite

APA:

Blake, A., Dabrowska, E., & Riches, N. (2025). Exploring cognitive predictors of language in children with developmental language disorder: The role of nonverbal IQ, working memory, implicit statistical learning, and speed of automatization. Journal of Communication Disorders, 116. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcomdis.2025.106541

MLA:

Blake, Ashley, Ewa Dabrowska, and Nick Riches. "Exploring cognitive predictors of language in children with developmental language disorder: The role of nonverbal IQ, working memory, implicit statistical learning, and speed of automatization." Journal of Communication Disorders 116 (2025).

BibTeX: Download