R01DC019335
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
Clinical Markers of DLD in Bilingual and Monolingual Vietnamese Children - Project Summary
Developmental Language Disorder (DLD: 7% prevalence), defined by low language despite otherwise normal development, puts children at greater risk for reading problems and lower vocational attainment. There exist language-based disparities in the identification of DLD. Bilingual children are more likely over- or under-identified with DLD (Samson & Lesaux, 2009): under-identification delays access to intervention, while over-identification misappropriates already scarce resources.
DLD identification is particularly challenging during the initial school years, when many bilinguals are in the process of learning English as a second language. Assessing children's first language substantially improves diagnostic accuracy. The proposed project focuses on Vietnamese, an understudied yet widely spoken language (1.5 million in the US, 100 million worldwide). Vietnamese is highly distinct from English: finding common clinical markers across contrastive languages contributes to theoretical accounts of underlying mechanisms of the disorder.
Our research team has the expertise and local and global partnerships to search for clinical markers of DLD in Vietnamese. We have pioneered the study of DLD in Vietnam by establishing a multi-method classification system for DLD in kindergarten and by measuring language-reading development from kindergarten through second grade. In the US, we have defined parameters for typical development (TD) in Vietnamese bilinguals in the early school years.
The proposed study will recruit Vietnamese-speaking children, ages 4-6 years, in the US (bilingual TD=100, DLD=25) and Vietnam (monolingual TD=160, DLD=40).
Central Hypothesis: There are Vietnamese clinical markers that will confirm the presence or absence of DLD at the individual level, whether children are learning Vietnamese alone or in combination with English.
Aim 1 establishes the diagnostic accuracy of nonword repetition and sentence repetition for Vietnamese monolinguals. We extend our prior work on these tasks to a younger age (include 4-year-olds) and a larger DLD sample.
Aim 2 systematically compares four groups (N=80, 20/group) of bilinguals (TD, DLD) and monolinguals (TD, DLD) matched by age, gender, and maternal education, to capture emerging skills that can serve as grammatical markers of Vietnamese DLD.
Aim 3 calculates the diagnostic accuracy of all clinical markers - grammar (accuracy, diversity, productivity), sentence repetition, and nonword repetition - for bilinguals (N=125), monolinguals (N=200), and the combined total sample (N=325), which will serve as the most rigorous test of diagnostic accuracy.
Impact: This project will help to transform clinical language assessment procedures to serve our increasingly diverse society. Tools produced from this project will improve diagnostic accuracy for Vietnamese-speaking children in the US and worldwide, particularly Vietnamese-speaking children in the US who start school with minimal English proficiency, for whom accurate identification heavily relies on first language skills. This study can serve as a model for other Asian tonal languages that, in combination with Vietnamese, comprise 6.5 million speakers in the US.
Developmental Language Disorder (DLD: 7% prevalence), defined by low language despite otherwise normal development, puts children at greater risk for reading problems and lower vocational attainment. There exist language-based disparities in the identification of DLD. Bilingual children are more likely over- or under-identified with DLD (Samson & Lesaux, 2009): under-identification delays access to intervention, while over-identification misappropriates already scarce resources.
DLD identification is particularly challenging during the initial school years, when many bilinguals are in the process of learning English as a second language. Assessing children's first language substantially improves diagnostic accuracy. The proposed project focuses on Vietnamese, an understudied yet widely spoken language (1.5 million in the US, 100 million worldwide). Vietnamese is highly distinct from English: finding common clinical markers across contrastive languages contributes to theoretical accounts of underlying mechanisms of the disorder.
Our research team has the expertise and local and global partnerships to search for clinical markers of DLD in Vietnamese. We have pioneered the study of DLD in Vietnam by establishing a multi-method classification system for DLD in kindergarten and by measuring language-reading development from kindergarten through second grade. In the US, we have defined parameters for typical development (TD) in Vietnamese bilinguals in the early school years.
The proposed study will recruit Vietnamese-speaking children, ages 4-6 years, in the US (bilingual TD=100, DLD=25) and Vietnam (monolingual TD=160, DLD=40).
Central Hypothesis: There are Vietnamese clinical markers that will confirm the presence or absence of DLD at the individual level, whether children are learning Vietnamese alone or in combination with English.
Aim 1 establishes the diagnostic accuracy of nonword repetition and sentence repetition for Vietnamese monolinguals. We extend our prior work on these tasks to a younger age (include 4-year-olds) and a larger DLD sample.
Aim 2 systematically compares four groups (N=80, 20/group) of bilinguals (TD, DLD) and monolinguals (TD, DLD) matched by age, gender, and maternal education, to capture emerging skills that can serve as grammatical markers of Vietnamese DLD.
Aim 3 calculates the diagnostic accuracy of all clinical markers - grammar (accuracy, diversity, productivity), sentence repetition, and nonword repetition - for bilinguals (N=125), monolinguals (N=200), and the combined total sample (N=325), which will serve as the most rigorous test of diagnostic accuracy.
Impact: This project will help to transform clinical language assessment procedures to serve our increasingly diverse society. Tools produced from this project will improve diagnostic accuracy for Vietnamese-speaking children in the US and worldwide, particularly Vietnamese-speaking children in the US who start school with minimal English proficiency, for whom accurate identification heavily relies on first language skills. This study can serve as a model for other Asian tonal languages that, in combination with Vietnamese, comprise 6.5 million speakers in the US.
Funding Goals
NOT APPLICABLE
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding / Funding Agency
Place of Performance
San Diego,
California
921821931
United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 297% from $381,075 to $1,511,836.
San Diego State University Foundation was awarded
Project Grant R01DC019335
worth $1,511,836
from National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders in July 2021 with work to be completed primarily in San Diego California United States.
The grant
has a duration of 5 years and
was awarded through assistance program 93.173 Research Related to Deafness and Communication Disorders.
The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity Typical and Atypical Patterns of Language and Literacy in Dual Language Learners (R01-Clinical Trial Optional).
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 6/20/24
Period of Performance
7/1/21
Start Date
6/30/26
End Date
Funding Split
$1.5M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$1.5M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Subgrant Awards
Disclosed subgrants for R01DC019335
Transaction History
Modifications to R01DC019335
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
R01DC019335
SAI Number
R01DC019335-1681089727
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Nonprofit With 501(c)(3) IRS Status (Other Than An Institution Of Higher Education)
Awarding Office
75N300 NIH NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON DEAFNESS AND OTHER COMMUNICATION DISORDERS
Funding Office
75N300 NIH NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON DEAFNESS AND OTHER COMMUNICATION DISORDERS
Awardee UEI
H59JKGFZKHL7
Awardee CAGE
04DC2
Performance District
CA-51
Senators
Dianne Feinstein
Alejandro Padilla
Alejandro Padilla
Budget Funding
Federal Account | Budget Subfunction | Object Class | Total | Percentage |
---|---|---|---|---|
National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, National Institutes of Health, Health and Human Services (075-0890) | Health research and training | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $755,306 | 100% |
Modified: 6/20/24