Exploratory Behavioral Study of the Production and Processing of French Categorical Liaisons in Children with Expressive DLD
Abstract
1. Introduction
1.1. Clinical Approach
1.2. Linguistic Perspective
- Between a determiner and its initial vowel noun (un, les, des, mon, son, ton, mes, tes, ses → un‿ours “a bear”);
- Between a determiner and an adjective (les‿autres enfants “the other children”);
- Between a clitic pronoun and a verb, or between two clitics (ils‿ont, je les‿aime, elles‿en ont);
- In the case of postposed personal pronouns (vient‿il?);
- In the case of enclitics, forming a single prosodic unit with the preceding term (de quoi parle-t-il ?);
- In specific fixed expressions and compound words (de temps‿en temps, porc‿épic, tout‿à fait).
1.3. Psycholinguistic Models of Categorical Liaison Acquisition
1.4. Cognitive Theories of DLD
1.5. Rationale and Aim of This Research
1.6. Predictions
- (1)
- Compared to typically developing peers, children with expressive DLD were expected to produce the canonical (unlinked) form more frequently—i.e., omit categorical liaison–across all tested contexts. This tendency was anticipated to be relatively stable across the 6–10 age range (pre-readers vs. readers), rather than showing a strong age-related improvement.
- (2)
- The error profile was expected to be dominated by omissions, with comparatively fewer substitutions/additions/regularizations. We explored whether word length and lexical frequency would modulate omission rates but did not expect large effects under our task constraints.
- (3)
- Individual differences in executive resources were expected to modulate production, such that higher working-memory span and better inhibitory control (indexed by digit span and a flanker-type measure) would be associated with fewer omissions.
- (4)
- For receptive skills, we anticipated relatively preserved detection of unrealized categorical liaisons in children with DLD, albeit at a slightly lower level than in typically developing children.
- (5)
- Finally, we explored a potential influence of literacy (readers vs. pre-readers), expecting at most modest benefits (e.g., in perception or in high-frequency contexts) without eliminating group differences. These predictions are descriptive and hypothesis-generating; they are intended to guide exploratory analyses rather than to test a fully specified confirmatory model.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants
2.1.1. Children with Expressive DLD
2.1.2. Neurotypical Children
2.2. Experimental Materials: Verbal and Non-Verbal Tests
- The verbal tests of perception consisted of two tasks. In the first task, the child was asked to repeat only one of three spoken variations in a nominal phrase composed of a determiner and a noun, with a change in the liaison (Test 1). Six items were presented. The same modality was used for a 12-item exercise constructed with subject–verb–determiner–noun/logatom (pseudoword) sentences (Test 2). In the perception tasks, omission errors are deliberately inserted to assess the child’s ability to recognize the omission as an error or a correct formulation.
- The verbal tests of production comprised two denomination tests that were adapted from previous studies [22,28]. The child was presented with an image and was required to state the element and the number of representatives of that element they could see. In order to vary the measurement methods, the following modifications were made: (1) a counting exercise was supported by an illustration with the aim of attenuating the impact of anomia and word confusion, and minimizing the task in working memory; (2) a series of five riddles was used to stimulate spontaneity and to reinforce the determiner/name liaison; (3) a story to be told based on six drawings required the use of nouns beginning with a vowel to be repeated several times, playing on the number. Figure 1 presents a series of six drawings used to encourage children to produce categorical liaisons.
2.3. Procedure
2.4. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Average Percentages of Correct Responses in Perception and Production
3.2. Comparison Between Children with Expressive DLD and Neurotypical Children’s Pre-Readers and Readers
- Group of 6–7-year-olds (N =17 pre-readers)
- Group of 8–10-year-olds (N = 29 readers)
3.3. Correlation Between Perception and Production Tests
3.4. Omission Error Rate Variations
3.5. Correlation Between Memory Span, Reverse Span and Production of the Categorical Liaison
3.6. Correlations Between Flanker Task Scores and Perception and Production Scores
4. Discussion
4.1. Summary of Main Findings
4.2. Relation to Previous Literature and Cognitive Mechanisms
4.3. Theoretical and Clinical Implications
4.4. Limitations and Future Directions
- Small sample size (N = 24) restricted statistical power and the ability to detect subtle effects of age or linguistic context.
- The cross-sectional design prevented us from establishing developmental trajectories or causality.
- Absence of randomization or counterbalancing of task order may have introduced fatigue or order effects.
- The use of nine ad hoc tasks was necessary given the lack of standardized tools but introduced methodological heterogeneity.
- The Flanker task is not specifically normed for this population, which limits the interpretability of inhibitory control findings.
- Our reliance on nonparametric statistics (Mann–Whitney U tests, correlations) restricts the depth of inference regarding theoretical models.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
| DLD | developmental language disorder |
| LTM | long-term memory |
| PDH | procedural deficit hypothesis |
| ULIS | unités localisées pour l’inclusion scolaire |
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| Age (In Yrs.) | Number of Neurotypical Children | Number of Children with Expressive DLD |
|---|---|---|
| 6 | 2 | 2 |
| 7 | 6 | 7 |
| 8 | 5 | 6 |
| 9 | 3 | 4 |
| 10 | 6 | 5 |
| Total | 22 | 24 |
| Type of Test | Perception | Production |
|---|---|---|
| Verbal test | Detection of liaison | Denomination |
| Memory span | Enumeration | |
| Counting | ||
| Riddle | ||
| Picture story to tell | ||
| Guided conversation | ||
| Reverse memory span | ||
| Nonverbal test | NA | Flanker test |
| Perception (%) | Production (%) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dys | Cont | Diff | Dys | Cont | Diff | |
| Pre-reader | 64.8 (26.6) | 84.03 (4.6) | −19.2 | 17.6 (13.1) | 80.5 (14.0) | −62.9 |
| Reader | 68.5 (17.0) | 88.1 (10.0) | −19.6 | 36.4 (30.0) | 89.0 (11.8) | −52.6 |
| Difference | +3.7 | +4.1 | +18.8 | +8.5 | ||
| Perception | Production | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dys | Cont | Dys | Cont | |
| Selec. Attention | −0.05 | +0.24 | +0.56 | +0.54 ** |
| Flanker effect | −0.40 | −0.30 | −0.41 * | −0.28 |
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Cesari, E.; Laks, B.; Isel, F. Exploratory Behavioral Study of the Production and Processing of French Categorical Liaisons in Children with Expressive DLD. NeuroSci 2025, 6, 112. https://doi.org/10.3390/neurosci6040112
Cesari E, Laks B, Isel F. Exploratory Behavioral Study of the Production and Processing of French Categorical Liaisons in Children with Expressive DLD. NeuroSci. 2025; 6(4):112. https://doi.org/10.3390/neurosci6040112
Chicago/Turabian StyleCesari, Elisabeth, Bernard Laks, and Frédéric Isel. 2025. "Exploratory Behavioral Study of the Production and Processing of French Categorical Liaisons in Children with Expressive DLD" NeuroSci 6, no. 4: 112. https://doi.org/10.3390/neurosci6040112
APA StyleCesari, E., Laks, B., & Isel, F. (2025). Exploratory Behavioral Study of the Production and Processing of French Categorical Liaisons in Children with Expressive DLD. NeuroSci, 6(4), 112. https://doi.org/10.3390/neurosci6040112

