4.2 Article

Production of third-person direct object clitics in children with cochlear implants speaking Italian

Journal

CLINICAL LINGUISTICS & PHONETICS
Volume 35, Issue 6, Pages 577-591

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/02699206.2020.1803406

Keywords

Direct object clitics; cochlear implant; Italian; language development

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This study found that school-aged children with cochlear implants may have difficulties in producing third-person singular accusative object clitics (3DO clitics), with some children showing poorer performance. Moreover, children with cochlear implants were more prone to agreement errors in case of gender mismatch, highlighting the need to consider this dimension in assessing and rehabilitating clitic production.
Previous research has shown that the production of third-person singular accusative object clitics (3DO clitics) might be taxing in Italian-speaking pre-school children with cochlear implants (CIs). We investigated this topic by assessing 3DO clitic production in 14 children with an average age of 8 years, who had received CI between age 1 and 4. The first goal of the study was to analyze whether school-aged children with CIs exhibit atypical behavior in 3DO clitic production. The second goal was to analyze whether children with CIs are prone to agreement errors in case of gender mismatch between the subject and the 3DO clitic, as has been shown for normal-hearing, typically developing children. To achieve this, we used two tasks in which subject and object clitic grammatical genders were manipulated so that they would or would not match. As for the first goal, the majority of children with CIs had good performance on the clitic tasks. However, some participants' performance was poor. The pattern of deviant responses differed among the poor performers. We believe that children with CIs showing impairments in 3DO clitic production need careful individual analysis in order to plan effective speech therapy. As for the second goal, children with CIs were more prone to agreement errors in the mismatch condition compared to the match condition; this dimension needs to be considered when assessing and eventually rehabilitating clitic production.

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