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Published in: Journal of Neurodevelopmental Disorders 1/2015

Open Access 01-12-2015 | Erratum

Erratum: Parental phonological memory contributes to prediction of outcome of late talkers from 20 months to 4 years: a longitudinal study of precursors of specific language impairment

Authors: Dorothy VM Bishop, Georgina Holt, Elizabeth Line, David McDonald, Sarah McDonald, Helen Watt

Published in: Journal of Neurodevelopmental Disorders | Issue 1/2015

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Excerpt

We have discovered an error in our article on “Parental phonological memory contributes to prediction of outcome of late talkers from 20 months to 4 years: a longitudinal study of precursors of specific language impairment” [1]. The account of how OCDI scores were converted to standardized scores (Page 4, column 2, section headed ‘Assessments at 18 to 20 months of age’) is incorrect. Although we explored the use of regression methods to derive norms, we decided against this approach because of skew in the data. In the final analysis we took existing normative data [2] for the age range 18.5–21 months and used the cumulative frequency distribution of word production scores to identify a cutoff. We used OCDI items 13–416 (i.e. excluding animal sounds), as many children in the normative sample did not have data on items 1–12. The cumulative frequency for 11 words was 16.4 % and for 10 words was 12.4 %, and so we used a cutoff of 10 words or less to correspond to one SD below average. …
Literature
1.
go back to reference Bishop DVM, Holt G, Line E, McDonald D, McDonald S, Watt H. Parental phonological memory contributes to prediction of outcome of late talkers from 20 months to 4 years: a longitudinal study of precursors of specific language impairment. J Neurodev Disord. 2012;4:3.PubMedCentralPubMedCrossRef Bishop DVM, Holt G, Line E, McDonald D, McDonald S, Watt H. Parental phonological memory contributes to prediction of outcome of late talkers from 20 months to 4 years: a longitudinal study of precursors of specific language impairment. J Neurodev Disord. 2012;4:3.PubMedCentralPubMedCrossRef
2.
go back to reference Hamilton A, Plunkett K, Schafer G. Infant vocabulary development assessed with a British Communicative Development Inventory. J Child Lang. 2000;27:689–705.PubMedCrossRef Hamilton A, Plunkett K, Schafer G. Infant vocabulary development assessed with a British Communicative Development Inventory. J Child Lang. 2000;27:689–705.PubMedCrossRef
Metadata
Title
Erratum: Parental phonological memory contributes to prediction of outcome of late talkers from 20 months to 4 years: a longitudinal study of precursors of specific language impairment
Authors
Dorothy VM Bishop
Georgina Holt
Elizabeth Line
David McDonald
Sarah McDonald
Helen Watt
Publication date
01-12-2015
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Journal of Neurodevelopmental Disorders / Issue 1/2015
Print ISSN: 1866-1947
Electronic ISSN: 1866-1955
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s11689-015-9110-0

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