Question Use in Conversational Discourse Among Individuals With and Without Traumatic Brain Injury
Yalian Pei, Lyndsey Jones, Jamila MingaPurpose:
This study investigated patterns of question use in conversation among individuals with traumatic brain injury (TBI) by analyzing the frequency, types, and social actions of the questions.
Method:
Questions from conversational discourse transcripts of 54 individuals with TBI and 49 age- and education-matched healthy controls with no brain injury (NBI) were extracted and coded by question type. Coded question types included either formal (polar [
Results:
Both analytical approaches revealed that individuals with TBI showed significantly reduced use of polar questions when compared to individuals with NBI. Individuals with TBI showed higher proportions of content questions (32.5% vs. 20.3%), functional questions (17.6% vs. 10.2%), and questions used to initiate repair in conversations (10.4% vs. 4.2%), although these differences were not statistically significant after correction for multiple comparisons.
Conclusions:
Individuals with TBI produced a significantly lower proportion of polar questions than individuals with NBI. Group differences in other question types and the frequency of repair-oriented questions did not remain statistically significant after correction for multiple comparisons. Future experimental study is warranted to confirm the question use patterns and investigate the functional impact of these differences on conversation effectiveness.