Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  1. Nov 1, 2023 · We identified potential risk factors for DLD and related language problems in the available literature through a thorough (though not systematic) literature search, using the key words ‘Specific Language Impairment’, ‘Developmental Language Disorder’, and ‘risk factors’.

  2. The genetics of language disorders falls into two camps: monogenic disorders, where a single change in the DNA is sufficient to cause disorder, and complex disorders, where many genetic changes combine to contribute to an overall susceptibility or risk which is further influenced by the environment.

  3. Nonetheless, over the last decade, genetic variants have been identified that may predispose certain individuals to different aspects of speech and language difficulties.

  4. Nov 1, 2018 · Here we review and discuss such interplay between environment and genetic predispositions in understanding language disorders, with a particular focus on a possible endophenotype, the ability for statistical sequential learning.

    • Luca Onnis, Anna Truzzi, Xiaomeng Ma
    • 2018
  5. Jul 9, 2018 · Here we review and discuss such interplay between environment and genetic predispositions in understanding language disorders, with a particular focus on a possible endophenotype, the ability...

  6. Apr 20, 2022 · Language disorders are highly heritable and are influenced by complex interactions between genetic and environmental factors. Despite more than twenty years of research, we still lack critical...

  7. In this article I review the results of family aggregation, pedigree, sex ratio, commingling, and segregation studies of spoken language disorders. The results of these studies provide evidence that, although spoken language disorders are genetically and behaviorally heterogeneous, genetic factors.

  1. People also search for