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History of Psychology:
The generativist–interactionist debate over specific language impairment:
Psycholinguistics at a crossroads
RAND
B. EVANS, Editor
East Carolina University
STUART SHANKER
Atkinson College, York University
Certain defining problems in psychology force us to clarify both the origins and
the limits of a paradigm that has long governed our thinking in a particular
area of research. The current debate over the nature and causes of specific
language impairment is proving to be just such an issue. In particular, the existence
of the KE family, 15 of whose 37 members suffer from specific language
impairment, has raised far-reaching questions about the conceptual foundations
of our current views about language deficits and, indeed, about language
development in general.
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