›› 2009, Vol. 29 ›› Issue (7): 772-.

• Monographic report (Child healthcare) • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Feasibility of clinical application of language sample analysis

JIN Zhi-juan, JIN Xing-ming   

  1. Department of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics, Shanghai Key Laboratory of Children's Environmental Health, Shanghai Children's Medical Center, School of Medicine, Shanghai Jiaotong University, Shanghai  200127,  China
  • Online:2009-07-25 Published:2009-09-16
  • Supported by:

    Shanghai Key Laboratory of Children's Environmental Health, 06DZ22024;Shanghai Key Discipline of Pediatrics, T0204;Shanghai Key Medical Discipline, 05Ⅲ002

Abstract:

Objective To explore the feasibility of language sample analysis in assessment of language development in children in order to provide evidences for its clinical application. Methods The study population consisted of a cross-sectional sample of 50 preschool Putonghua-speaking children aged 4 to 6 years. The data on measurement of utterance length (MLU) and lexical diversity (D) were computed from 20 minutes' conversational language samples, and correlation analysis was conducted among MLU, D, age, Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence (WPPSI) and Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test (PPVT). Splited sample analysis by comparing MLU of first one hundred utterances and MLU of last one hundred utterance, D of odd lexicals and D of even lexicals were conducted to test the validity of language sample indictors. Results MLU and D development of the preschool Putonghua-speaking children were positively related to age. MLU, D, age, verbal intelligence quotient (VIQ) and PPVT were associated with each other (P<0.05 or P≤0.01) except age and VIQ(P>0.05). There were significant correlations between MLU of first one hundred utterances and MLU of last one hundred utterances and between D of odd lexicals and D of even lexicals(P=0.000). Conclusion Language sample analysis proves to be feasible in assessment of language development in preschool children aged 4 to 6 years.

Key words: mean length of utterance, lexical diversity, standardized test, language sample analysis