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Journal ArticleDOI

Developmental language disorders – a follow-up in later adult life. Cognitive, language and psychosocial outcomes

TLDR
A receptive developmental language disorder involves significant deficits in theory of mind, verbal short-term memory and phonological processing, together with substantial social adaptation difficulties and increased risk of psychiatric disorder in adult life.
Abstract
Background: Little is known on the adult outcome and longitudinal trajectory of childhood developmental language disorders (DLD) and on the prognostic predictors. Method:  Seventeen men with a severe receptive DLD in childhood, reassessed in middle childhood and early adult life, were studied again in their mid-thirties with tests of intelligence (IQ), language, literacy, theory of mind and memory together with assessments of psychosocial outcome. They were compared with the non language disordered siblings of the DLD cohort to control for shared family background, adults matched to the DLD cohort on age and performance IQ (IQM group) and a cohort from the National Child Development Study (NCDS) matched to the DLD cohort on childhood IQ and social class. Results:  The DLD men had normal intelligence with higher performance IQ than verbal IQ, a severe and persisting language disorder, severe literacy impairments and significant deficits in theory of mind and phonological processing. Within the DLD cohort higher childhood intelligence and language were associated with superior cognitive and language ability at final adult outcome. In their mid-thirties, the DLD cohort had significantly worse social adaptation (with prolonged unemployment and a paucity of close friendships and love relationships) compared with both their siblings and NCDS controls. Self-reports showed a higher rate of schizotypal features but not affective disorder. Four DLD adults had serious mental health problems (two had developed schizophrenia). Conclusion:  A receptive developmental language disorder involves significant deficits in theory of mind, verbal short-term memory and phonological processing, together with substantial social adaptation difficulties and increased risk of psychiatric disorder in adult life. The theoretical and clinical implications of the findings are discussed.

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Citations
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Health literacy interventions and outcomes: an updated systematic review.

TL;DR: Differences in health literacy level were consistently associated with increased hospitalizations, greater emergency care use, lower use of mammography, lower receipt of influenza vaccine, poorer ability to demonstrate taking medications appropriately, poorer able to interpret labels and health messages, and, among seniors, poorer overall health status and higher mortality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Continuities and discontinuities in psychopathology between childhood and adult life.

TL;DR: The key research challenges that remain concern the testing of competing hypotheses on mediating processes, the changes involved in adolescence, the transition from prodromal phase to overt schizophrenia and the emergence of adolescent-limited antisocial behaviour.
Journal ArticleDOI

Autism spectrum disorders and childhood-onset schizophrenia: clinical and biological contributions to a relation revisited.

TL;DR: Biological risk does not closely follow DSM phenotypes, and core neurobiological processes are likely common for subsets of these two heterogeneous clinical groups, with particular attention to childhood-onset schizophrenia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Predicting language outcomes at 4 years of age: findings from Early Language in Victoria Study

TL;DR: Measures of social disadvantage helped explain more variation in outcomes at 4 years than at 2 years, but ability to predict low language status and SLI status remained limited.
Journal ArticleDOI

Twenty-Year Follow-Up of Children With and Without Speech-Language Impairments: Family, Educational, Occupational, and Quality of Life Outcomes

TL;DR: At age 25, young adults with a history of language impairments showed poorer outcomes than their peers without early communication impairments and those with early speech-only impairments, but subjective well-being was primarily associated with strong social networks of family, friends, and others.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The ''Reading the Mind in the Eyes'' Test Revised Version: A Study with Normal Adults, and Adults with Asperger Syndrome or High-functioning Autism

TL;DR: The Revised Eyes Test has improved power to detect subtle individual differences in social sensitivity and was inversely correlated with the Autism Spectrum Quotient (the AQ), a measure of autistic traits in adults of normal intelligence.
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An advanced test of theory of mind: understanding of story characters' thoughts and feelings by able autistic, mentally handicapped, and normal children and adults.

TL;DR: Autistic subjects were impaired at providing context-appropriate mental state explanations for the story characters' nonliteral utterances, compared to normal and mentally handicapped controls.
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The SPQ: A Scale for the Assessment of Schizotypal Personality Based on DSM-III-R Criteria

TL;DR: The SPQ was found to have high sampling validity, high internal reliability, test-retest reliability, convergent validity, and criterion validity, findings which were replicated across samples, and may be useful in screening for schizotypal personality disorder in the general population and also in researching the correlates of individual schizotypesal traits.
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Another advanced test of theory of mind: evidence from very high functioning adults with autism or asperger syndrome.

TL;DR: Very high functioning adults with autism or Asperger Syndrome are reported on an adult test of theory of mind ability, providing evidence for subtle mindreading deficits in very high functioning individuals on the autistic continuum.
Journal ArticleDOI

Executive function deficits in high-functioning autistic individuals: Relationship to theory of mind

TL;DR: A group of high-functioning autistic individuals was compared to a clinical control group matched on VIQ, age, sex and SES, and the relationship of executive function and theory of mind deficits to each other, and their primacy to autism are discussed.
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