from Part VI - Language Disorders, Interventions, and Instruction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 July 2022
This chapter focuses on how working memory develops in children who are born deaf. It includes studies of deaf users of spoken and signed languages from within the medical and social models of deafness. It also reviews how differences in working memory capacity have been explained between deaf and hearing children. It reviews the role of auditory function in the establishment of working memory, as well as consideration of language as a mediator. It concludes with a proposal that deafness leads to disrupted early exposure to language and reduced subvocal rehearsal abilities, which both impact on the operation of the working memory system.
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