This study was designed to investigate early auditory memory
and its possible contribution to an auditory processing deficit
shown by some children with language impairment. Ten children
with language impairment and 10 age-matched controls participated
in a series of simultaneous and backward masking tasks. The
same backward masking stimulus was then used to elicit a mismatch
negativity response. In the behavioral conditions, children
in the language impairment group had significantly higher (poorer)
signal thresholds than their nonimpaired controls in backward
masking, but their thresholds in simultaneous masking were not
significantly different. In the mismatch-negativity conditions,
latency was prolonged and the amplitude was diminished in the
children with language impairment. Taken together, these
psychoacoustic and electrophysiological data suggest that in
a group of children with language impairment, underlying the
nonsensory language disorder, there is a neurophysiological
impairment in auditory memory for complex, nonlinguistic sounds.