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Purpose: Personal narrative production, or the ability to talk about past events that have been personally experienced, relies on a wide range of linguistic skills and is influenced by memory and socio-emotional traits. This study investigated the predictive role of memory mechanisms and socio-emotional functioning on personal narrative production in children with developmental language disorder (DLD) compared to children with typical language development (TLD).
Method: Fifty 9- to 11-year-old Croatian-speaking children with DLD and 50 gender-matched peers with TLD narrated personal narratives elicited through emotion-based prompts using the Global TALES (Talking About Lived Experiences in Stories) protocol. Children's narratives were analyzed at linguistic, propositional, macrostructure-planning, and pragmatic levels. Children were also assessed using measures of memory mechanisms, including the episodic buffer, and semantic access and fluency, as well as measures of socio-emotional functioning using the Beck Youth Inventory.
Results: Results showed significant group differences in personal narrative production, with the DLD group demonstrating lower performance than the TLD group. It was found that episodic buffer, followed by anxiety, played a predictive role in personal narrative production, but group membership (DLD vs. TLD) did not moderate this variance.
Conclusions: These findings highlight the important contribution of nonlinguistic skills, including anxiety symptoms and the episodic buffer, in organizing information necessary for the construction of personal narratives at the individual level, regardless of group membership. This increased understanding of linguistic and nonlinguistic skills contributing to personal narrative performance has the potential to influence assessment and intervention practices for children with DLD.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1044/2025_JSLHR-25-00047 | DOI Listing |
J Speech Lang Hear Res
September 2025
Griffith Institute for Educational Research, Griffith University, Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia.
Purpose: Personal narrative production, or the ability to talk about past events that have been personally experienced, relies on a wide range of linguistic skills and is influenced by memory and socio-emotional traits. This study investigated the predictive role of memory mechanisms and socio-emotional functioning on personal narrative production in children with developmental language disorder (DLD) compared to children with typical language development (TLD).
Method: Fifty 9- to 11-year-old Croatian-speaking children with DLD and 50 gender-matched peers with TLD narrated personal narratives elicited through emotion-based prompts using the Global TALES (Talking About Lived Experiences in Stories) protocol.
Health Aff (Millwood)
September 2025
Andrew Goodman is a board member of the National Coalition to Liberate Methadone, a coordinator of educational opportunities at Right Response Colorado, an advisory board member and policy advocate at the Colorado Drug Policy Coalition, and a community navigator for th
A person with opioid use disorder navigates ineffective treatment before receiving methadone, which works but is hampered by restrictions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Speech Lang Pathol
August 2025
School of Allied Health and Communicative Disorders, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb.
Purpose: A large proportion of children who use augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) devices to communicate are bilingual. However, many AAC devices predominantly feature vocabulary that is translated from English into the child's other language, lacking cultural and linguistic responsiveness. This can limit effective communication for bilingual users.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth care has long been viewed as a system built on science, skill, and trust, yet when a clinician becomes a patient, a stark reality emerges: the trust we assume is inherent can often be fractured by systemic disconnection, dehumanization, and a culture that prioritizes protocols over people. In this narrative reflection, I share my personal journey as a nurse who became a patient during the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic-an experience that exposed not only the failures of care but the heavy burdens placed on health care workers by a system designed to stretch them beyond human limits. This story underscores the urgent need to reconnect with the humanity that lives at the heart of healing and to recognize that rebuilding trust begins not with blaming individuals but with transforming a broken culture.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Glob Womens Health
August 2025
AAD Cities, School of Art, Architecture and Design, London Metropolitan University, London, United Kingdom.
This article explores how the spatial, relational, and sensory conditions within an obstetric-led hospital birth room were subtly reconfigured to support a safe, satisfying birth, even though the birth in question was considered high risk. Drawing on autoethnographic reflections and interviews with caregivers from the author's own birth at the National Health Service Royal London Hospital, the paper examines the transformation of a standard labour ward room through a low-tech intervention: the erection of a cloth screen brought from home. This simple act created a distinct spatial zone in which institutional norms were less prevalent, fostering privacy, autonomy, and integrative care practices that protected physiological labour and enhanced maternal agency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF