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Research Article
June 2003

Outcomes of Early Language Delay: II. Etiology of Transient and Persistent Language Difficulties

Publication: Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research
Volume 46, Number 3
Pages 561-575

Abstract

Genes are known to play an important role in causing specific language impairment, but it is unclear how far a similar etiology is implicated in transient language delay in early childhood. Two-year-old children with vocabulary scores below the 10th centile were selected from a cohort of over 2,800 same-sex twin pairs whose language was assessed by parental report at 2, 3, and 4 years of age. These children with early language delay (ELD) were divided into cases of transient and persistent language difficulties on the basis of outcome at 3 and 4 years. A DeFries-Fulker analysis (J. C. DeFries & D. W. Fulker, 1985) was used to compute group heritability (h2g) of 2-year vocabulary delay separately for those with transient and persistent difficulties. When 3-year and 4-year language attainments were used to categorize outcomes, h2g was similar and modest (.25 or less) for both transient and persistent difficulties. However, when persistent difficulties were defined according to whether parents expressed concern about language at 3 years or according to whether a professional had been consulted about language difficulties at 4 years, heritability was significantly higher. For 289 children with no professional involvement at 4 years, heritability of 2-year vocabulary delay was close to zero, whereas for 134 children with professional involvement, a significant h2g of .41 (SE=.127) was found. Early language delay appears largely environmental in origin for 2-year-olds whose parents do not go on to seek professional help.

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Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research
Volume 46Number 3June 2003
Pages: 561-575

History

  • Received: Dec 7, 2001
  • Accepted: Dec 17, 2002
  • Published in issue: Jun 1, 2003

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Keywords

  1. language delay
  2. preschoolers
  3. genetic influence
  4. longitudinal outcome

Authors

Affiliations

Dorothy V. M. Bishop
University of Oxford, Oxford, U.K.
Thomas S. Price
University of Oxford, Oxford, U.K.
Philip S. Dale, PhD
University of Missouri-Columbia
Robert Plomin
Institute of Psychiatry, London

Notes

Contact author: Philip S. Dale, PhD, Communication Sciences and Disorders, 303 Lewis Hall, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65211. E-mail: [email protected]

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