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A maturational frequency discrimination deficit may explain developmental language disorder

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A maturational frequency discrimination deficit may explain developmental language disorder. / Jones, Samuel David; Stewart, Hannah J; Westermann, Gert.
In: Psychological Review, Vol. 131, No. 3, 01.04.2024, p. 695-715.

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Jones SD, Stewart HJ, Westermann G. A maturational frequency discrimination deficit may explain developmental language disorder. Psychological Review. 2024 Apr 1;131(3):695-715. Epub 2023 Jul 27. doi: 10.1037/rev0000436

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Jones, Samuel David ; Stewart, Hannah J ; Westermann, Gert. / A maturational frequency discrimination deficit may explain developmental language disorder. In: Psychological Review. 2024 ; Vol. 131, No. 3. pp. 695-715.

Bibtex

@article{bbfccbb435db4827800bc1cf9bb64847,
title = "A maturational frequency discrimination deficit may explain developmental language disorder",
abstract = "Auditory perceptual deficits are widely observed among children with developmental language disorder (DLD). Yet the nature of these deficits and the extent to which they explain speech and language problems remain controversial. In this study, we hypothesise that disruption to the maturation of the basilar membrane may impede the optimisation of the auditory pathway from brainstem to cortex, curtailing high-resolution frequency sensitivity and the efficient spectral decomposition and encoding of natural speech. A series of computational simulations involving deep convolutional neural networks that were trained to encode, recognise, and retrieve naturalistic speech are presented to demonstrate the strength of this account. These neural networks were built on top of biologically truthful inner ear models developed to model human cochlea function, which – in the key innovation of the current study – were scheduled to mature at different rates over time. Delaying cochlea maturation qualitatively replicated the linguistic behaviour and neurophysiology of individuals with language learning difficulties in a number of ways, resulting in: (i) delayed language acquisition profiles; (ii) lower spoken word recognition accuracy; (iii) word finding and retrieval difficulties; (iv) {\textquoteleft}fuzzy{\textquoteright} and intersecting speech encodings and signatures of immature neural optimisation; and (v) emergent working memory and attentional deficits. These simulations illustrate the many negative cascading effects that a primary maturational frequency discrimination deficit may have on early language development, and generate precise and testable hypotheses for future research into the nature and cost of auditory processing deficits in children with language learning difficulties.",
author = "Jones, {Samuel David} and Stewart, {Hannah J} and Gert Westermann",
year = "2024",
month = apr,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1037/rev0000436",
language = "English",
volume = "131",
pages = "695--715",
journal = "Psychological Review",
issn = "0033-295X",
publisher = "American Psychological Association Inc.",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A maturational frequency discrimination deficit may explain developmental language disorder

AU - Jones, Samuel David

AU - Stewart, Hannah J

AU - Westermann, Gert

PY - 2024/4/1

Y1 - 2024/4/1

N2 - Auditory perceptual deficits are widely observed among children with developmental language disorder (DLD). Yet the nature of these deficits and the extent to which they explain speech and language problems remain controversial. In this study, we hypothesise that disruption to the maturation of the basilar membrane may impede the optimisation of the auditory pathway from brainstem to cortex, curtailing high-resolution frequency sensitivity and the efficient spectral decomposition and encoding of natural speech. A series of computational simulations involving deep convolutional neural networks that were trained to encode, recognise, and retrieve naturalistic speech are presented to demonstrate the strength of this account. These neural networks were built on top of biologically truthful inner ear models developed to model human cochlea function, which – in the key innovation of the current study – were scheduled to mature at different rates over time. Delaying cochlea maturation qualitatively replicated the linguistic behaviour and neurophysiology of individuals with language learning difficulties in a number of ways, resulting in: (i) delayed language acquisition profiles; (ii) lower spoken word recognition accuracy; (iii) word finding and retrieval difficulties; (iv) ‘fuzzy’ and intersecting speech encodings and signatures of immature neural optimisation; and (v) emergent working memory and attentional deficits. These simulations illustrate the many negative cascading effects that a primary maturational frequency discrimination deficit may have on early language development, and generate precise and testable hypotheses for future research into the nature and cost of auditory processing deficits in children with language learning difficulties.

AB - Auditory perceptual deficits are widely observed among children with developmental language disorder (DLD). Yet the nature of these deficits and the extent to which they explain speech and language problems remain controversial. In this study, we hypothesise that disruption to the maturation of the basilar membrane may impede the optimisation of the auditory pathway from brainstem to cortex, curtailing high-resolution frequency sensitivity and the efficient spectral decomposition and encoding of natural speech. A series of computational simulations involving deep convolutional neural networks that were trained to encode, recognise, and retrieve naturalistic speech are presented to demonstrate the strength of this account. These neural networks were built on top of biologically truthful inner ear models developed to model human cochlea function, which – in the key innovation of the current study – were scheduled to mature at different rates over time. Delaying cochlea maturation qualitatively replicated the linguistic behaviour and neurophysiology of individuals with language learning difficulties in a number of ways, resulting in: (i) delayed language acquisition profiles; (ii) lower spoken word recognition accuracy; (iii) word finding and retrieval difficulties; (iv) ‘fuzzy’ and intersecting speech encodings and signatures of immature neural optimisation; and (v) emergent working memory and attentional deficits. These simulations illustrate the many negative cascading effects that a primary maturational frequency discrimination deficit may have on early language development, and generate precise and testable hypotheses for future research into the nature and cost of auditory processing deficits in children with language learning difficulties.

U2 - 10.1037/rev0000436

DO - 10.1037/rev0000436

M3 - Journal article

VL - 131

SP - 695

EP - 715

JO - Psychological Review

JF - Psychological Review

SN - 0033-295X

IS - 3

ER -