Janet A Ford

Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY, USA

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Publications (3)4.81 Total impact

  • Article: Inference generation during discourse and its relation to social competence: an online investigation of abilities of children with and without language impairment.
    Janet A Ford, Linda M Milosky
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    ABSTRACT: This study examined whether young children with typical language development (TL) and children with language impairment (LI) make emotion inferences online during the process of discourse comprehension, identified variables that predict emotion inferencing, and explored the relationship of these variables to social competence. Preschool children (16 TL and 16 LI) watched narrated videos designed to activate knowledge about a particular emotional state. Following each story, children named a facial expression that either matched or did not match the anticipated emotion. Several experimental tasks examined linguistic and nonlinguistic abilities. Finally, each child's teacher completed a measure of social competence. Children with TL named expressions significantly more slowly in the mismatched condition than in the matched condition, whereas children with LI did not differ in response times between the conditions. Language and vocal response time measures were related to emotion inferencing ability, and this ability predicted social competence scores. The findings suggest that children with TL are inferring emotions during the comprehension process, whereas children with LI often fail to make these inferences. Making emotion inferences is related to discourse comprehension and to social competence in children. The current findings provide evidence that language and vocal response time measures predicted inferencing ability and suggest that additional factors may influence discourse inferencing and social competence.
    Journal of Speech Language and Hearing Research 05/2008; 51(2):367-80. · 1.88 Impact Factor
  • Article: Inferring emotional reactions in social situations: differences in children with language impairment.
    Janet A Ford, Linda M Milosky
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    ABSTRACT: Anticipating and responding to a partner's emotional reactions are key components in the comprehension of daily social discourse. Kindergarten children with language impairment (LI) and age-matched controls (CA) were asked to label facial expressions depicting 1 of 4 emotions (happy, surprised, sad, mad) and to identify those expressions when given a verbal label. Children then chose among these facial expressions when asked to infer emotional reactions from stories (3-sentence scenarios) presented in 1 of 3 modalities: verbal, visual, and combined. Although all children were able to identify and label the facial expressions, children with LI had difficulty integrating emotion knowledge with event context in order to infer a character's feelings. When these inferencing errors occurred, children in the LI group were more likely to provide emotions of a different valence (e.g., substituting happy for mad) than were children in the CA group. Inferencing ability was related to language comprehension performance on a standardized test. The findings suggest that inferencing errors made by children with LI occur during the early stages of social processing and may contribute to social difficulties often experienced by this group of children.
    Journal of Speech Language and Hearing Research 03/2003; 46(1):21-30. · 1.88 Impact Factor
  • Article: The Role of Prosody in Children's Inferences of Ironic Intent
    Janet A. Ford, Linda M. Milosky
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    ABSTRACT: Examines the effects of prosodic variation (vocal affect) on the type of inferences six- and nine-year-old children made about a speaker's communicative intent. Demonstrates that children's interpretations of potentially ironic utterances were influenced by prosody, and the nature of this influence differed by age. (SR)
    Discourse Processes 12/1996; · 1.06 Impact Factor

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Institutions

  • 2003–2008
    • Syracuse University
      • Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders
      Syracuse, NY, USA