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1
Creating a novel approach to discourse treatment through coproduction with people with aphasia and speech and language therapists
Hersh, D.; Scarth, L.; Bannister, J.. - : Informa UK Limited, 2021
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2
Creating a theoretical framework to underpin discourse assessment and intervention in aphasia
Boyle, M.; Botting, N.; Cruice, M.. - : MDPI, 2021
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3
A systematic review of language and communication intervention research delivered in groups to older adults living in care homes
Davis, L.; Botting, N.; Cruice, M.. - : Wiley, 2021
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4
The interplay between early social interaction, language and executive function development in deaf and hearing infants
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5
Creating a novel approach to discourse treatment through coproduction with people with aphasia and speech and language therapists
In: Research outputs 2014 to 2021 (2021)
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6
Treatment for improving discourse in aphasia: a systematic review and synthesis of the evidence base
Dipper, L.; Marshall, J.; Boyle, M.. - : Informa UK Limited, 2020
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7
Expressive vocabulary predicts non-verbal executive function: a 2-year longitudinal study of deaf and hearing children
Jones, A.; Marshall, C.; Botting, N.. - : Wiley, 2020
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8
Language, literacy and cognitive skills of young adults with Developmental Language Disorder (DLD)
Botting, N.. - : Wiley, 2020
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9
UK speech and language therapists’ views and reported practices of discourse analysis in aphasia rehabilitation
Cruice, M.; Botting, N.; Marshall, J.. - : Wiley, 2020
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10
The Speech Language and Communication Needs of Rough Sleepers in London
Andrews, L.; Botting, N.. - : Wiley, 2020
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11
Childhood autism in the UK and Greece: a cross-national study of progress in different intervention contexts
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12
Education and employment outcomes of young adults with a history of developmental language disorder
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13
Do emotional difficulties and peer problems hew together from childhood to adolescence? The case of children with a history of developmental language disorder (DLD)
Conti-Ramsden, G.; Mok, P.; Durkin, K.. - : Springer (part of Springer Nature), 2018
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14
Non-verbal executive function is mediated by language: A study of deaf and hearing children
Botting, N.; Jones, A.; Marshall, C.. - : Wiley, 2017
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15
Semantic fluency in deaf children who use spoken and signed language, in comparison to hearing peers
Marshall, C.; Atkinson, J.; Morgan, G.. - : Wiley-Blackwell, 2017
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16
Sleep behaviour relates to language skills in children with and without communication disorders
Botting, N.; Baraka, N.. - : Maney Publishing, 2017
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17
Prosociality from Early Adolescence to Young Adulthood: A Longitudinal Study of Individuals with a History of Language Impairment
Toseeb, U.; Pickles, A.R.; Durkin, K.; Botting, N.; Conti-Ramsden, G.. - : Pergamon Press Ltd., 2017
Abstract: Background: Longitudinal research into the development of prosociality contributes vitally to understanding of individual differences in psychosocial outcomes. Most of the research to date has been concerned with prosocial behaviour in typically developing young people; much less has been directed to the course of development in individuals with developmental disorders. Aims: This study reports a longitudinal investigation of prosocial behaviour in young people with language impairment (LI), and compares trajectories of development to typically developing age-matched peers (AMPs). Methods and Procedures: Participants were followed from age 11 years to young adulthood (age 24 years). Outcomes and Results: Participants with LI perceived themselves as prosocial; their ratings – though lower than those for the AMPs - were well within the normal range and they remained consistently so from 11 to 24 years. Two different developmental trajectories were identified for the LI group, which were stable and differed only in level of prosociality. Approximately one third of participants with LI followed a moderate prosociality trajectory whilst the majority (71%) followed a prosocial trajectory. We found evidence of protective effects of prosociality for social outcomes in young adulthood. Conclusions and Implications: The findings indicate that prosociality is an area of relative strength in LI.
Keyword: P Philology. Linguistics; R Medicine
URL: https://openaccess.city.ac.uk/id/eprint/16258/3/RinDD%20Prosociality%20trajectories%20ACCEPTED%20paper%20for%20CRO%20Jan%202017.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ridd.2017.01.018
https://openaccess.city.ac.uk/id/eprint/16258/
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18
Social Confidence in Early Adulthood among Young People with and without a History of Language Impairment
Durkin, K.; Toseeb, U.; Botting, N.. - : American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, 2017
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19
Developmental course of conversational behaviour of children with 22q11.2 deletion syndrome and Williams syndrome
Van Den Heuvel, E.; Botting, N.; Boudewijns, I.. - : SAGE Publications, 2017
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20
Working memory and developmental language impairments
Henry, L.; Botting, N.. - : SAGE Publications (UK and US), 2016
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