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Spoken word recognition in adults with DLD (Trinh et al., 2026)
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Spoken word recognition in adults with DLD (Trinh et al., 2026)

Mi Trinh, J. Bruce Tomblin, Jacob J. Oleson and Kristi Hendrickson
ASHA journals
02/04/2026
DOI: 10.23641/asha.31158757
url
https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.31158757View
Open Access

Abstract

Purpose: This study aims to address the critical gap in research on real-time language processing in adults with developmental language disorder (DLD). We examine whether adults with DLD continue to exhibit differences in the dynamics of spoken word recognition observed in childhood or whether these differences resolve by adulthood. Additionally, drawing on data from the Iowa Longitudinal Study, we investigate how individual differences in adult word recognition are shaped by early childhood language abilities.Method: Adults aged 34–36 years (n = 71; 28 with a childhood diagnosis of DLD) were recruited from a cohort of individuals who participated in the Iowa Longitudinal Study. The dynamics of spoken word recognition were assessed using eye tracking in the visual world paradigm in which participants heard a word and selected the correct visual referent from a display of four images: the target (“money”), phonological competitors (cohort [e.g., “mother”] or rhyme [e.g., “honey”]), and unrelated items (“whistle” and “blanket”).Results: We analyzed eye fixations to the target to assess the degree and speed of recognition and fixations to competitors to evaluate the timing and strength of lexical competition across groups. Adults with DLD activated targets and competitors similarly to adults with typical language, no longer exhibiting deficits found in childhood. However, across groups, both regression and principal component analyses revealed that individual differences in language scores in kindergarten are strongly linked to the dynamics of word recognition 30 years later.Conclusions: Results suggest that, by adulthood, the dynamics underlying spoken word recognition for familiar words are largely similar in adults with and without DLD. However, individual differences in spoken word recognition in adulthood are strongly predicted by language ability in kindergarten. Findings emphasize the role of early language skills in laying the foundation for basic language processes in adulthood and underscore the importance of viewing language ability as a continuous spectrum rather than a categorical construct.Supplemental Material S1. Lexical frequency (frequency per million) and Age of Acquisition (AoA) for word stimuli.Supplemental Material S2. Model selection results for all dependent variables.Supplemental Material S3. Regression model results for models used in main analyses.Supplemental Material S4. Accuracy (%) and reaction time (ms) by item.Trinh, M., Tomblin, J. B., Oleson, J., & Hendrickson, K. (2026). Real-time spoken word recognition in adults with and without developmental language disorder: The role of early language skills. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1044/2025_JSLHR-25-00464
Speech Pathology English language Speech recognition

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