Jim Montgomery, professor, is associate director of Communication Sciences and Disorder. His teaching area is language and cognitive impairments in school-age children and adolescents with language impairment. He has an active research program focusing on these children’s cognition and sentence comprehension and interventions to remediate their sentence comprehension deficits.
Education
· PhD: Communication Sciences and Disorders, Wichita State University, 1988
· MA: Speech and Hearing Sciences, Indiana University, 1982
· BA: Communication Arts and Sciences, DePauw University, 1979
Research/Professional Interests
· Cognitive-Linguistics Underpinnings of Sentence Comprehension in Children with Developmental Language Disorder
· Intervention Approaches to Remediating Sentence Comprehension Deficits in Children with Developmental Language Disorder
Teaching Experience
· MA Course: Language Disabilities in School-Age Children and Adolescents
· PhD Seminars: Cognition and Attention, Psycholinguistics, Grant Writing
Clinical Experience
· Diagnosis and Treatment of Children with Language Disabilities
Publications (Select)
· Montgomery, J., Gillam, R., Evans, J., Fargo, J., & Schwartz, S. (in press). Comparison of the storage-only deficit and joint mechanism deficit hypotheses of the verbal working memory capacity limitation of children with developmental language disorder. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research.
· Evans, J., Gillam, R., & Montgomery, J. (2018). Cognitive predictors of spoken word recognition in children with and without developmental language disorders. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 61, 1409-1425.
· Montgomery, J., Evans, J., Fargo, J., Schwartz, S., & Gillam, R. (2018). Structural relationship between cognitive processing and syntactic sentence comprehension in children with and without developmental language disorder. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 61, 2950-2976.
· Montgomery, J., Gillam, R., Evans, J., & Sergeev, A. (2017). Whatdunit? Sentence comprehension abilities of children with SLI: Sensitivity to word order in canonical and noncanonical sentences. Journal of Speech and Language Hearing Research, 60, 2603-2618.
· Ahmad Rusli, Y., & Montgomery, J. (2017). Children’s comprehension of object relative sentences: It’s extant language knowledge that matters, not domain-general working memory. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 60, 2865-2878.
· Montgomery, J., Gillam, R., & Evans, J. (2016). Syntactic versus memory-based accounts of sentence comprehension in children with SLI: Looking back, looking ahead. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 59, 1491-1504.
· Fu, G., Wan, N., Baker, J., Montgomery, J., Evans, J., & Gillam, R. (2016). A proof of concept study of function-based statistical analysis of fNIRs data: Syntax comprehension in children with specific language impairment compared to typically developing controls. Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience. http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnbeh.2016.00108
· Montgomery, J., Evans, J., Gillam, R., Sergeev, A., & Finney, M. (2016). Whatdunit?: Developmental changes in children’s syntactically-based sentence interpretation abilities and sensitivity to word order. Applied Psycholinguistics, 37, 1281-1309.
· Finney, M., Montgomery, J., Gillam, R., & Evans, J. (2014). Role of working memory storage and attention focus switching in children’s comprehension of spoken object relative sentences. Child Development Research, 54, 1-11.
· Magimairaj, B., & Montgomery, J. (2013). Examining the relative contribution of memory updating, attention focus switching, and sustained attention to children’s verbal working memory span. Child Development Research, 53, 1-12.
· Magimairaj, B., & Montgomery, J. (2012). Children’s verbal working memory and the role of processing complexity in predicting spoken sentence comprehension. Journal of Speech, Language and Hearing Research, 55, 669-682.
· Magimairaj, B., & Montgomery, J. (2012). Children's verbal working memory: Relative importance of storage, general processing speed, and domain-general controlled attention. Acta Psychologica, 140, 196-207.
· Montgomery, J., Magimairaj, B., & Finney, M. (2010). Working memory and specific language impairment: An update on the relation and perspectives on assessment and treatment. American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 19, 78-94.
Grants
· Principal Investigator (Co-PIs: Julia Evans, Ron Gillam): Cognitive Processing and Sentence Comprehension in SLI. R01 from the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders.
· Principal Investigator: Language and rate processing in language impaired children. R01 from the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders.
· Co-Investigator (PI: Joseph Hall): Development and plasticity in normal and impaired ears. R01 from the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders.
· Co-Investigator (PI: Joanne Roberts): Otitis media and school outcomes: Environmental mediators. R01 from the National Institute for Child Health and Human Development.
· Principal Investigator: Inflectional processing by language impaired children. R03 from the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders.
Awards and Honors
· Fellow American Speech-Language-Hearing Association
· Editor’s Award: American Journal of Speech Language Pathology for article “Understanding the language difficulties of children with language impairments: Does verbal working memory matter?”
· Outstanding Alumi Award from the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Wichita State University
University/Professional Service (Select)
· Council on Research, Scholarship, & Creative Activity
· Presidential Scholar Research Award Competition
· Grant Reviewer: NIH
· Grant Reviewer: ASHA Foundation
· Associate Editor: Preschool and School-Age Language, American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology
· Associate Editor for Language: Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research
· Associate Editor-Language: Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research
· Reviewer: Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research
· Reviewer: American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology
· Reviewer: Topics in Language Disorders
· Reviewer: Speech, Language Services in Schools
· Reviewer: Applied Psycholinguistics
· Reviewer: Journal of Communication Disorders
· Reviewer: Ear and Hearing
· Reviewer: First Language
· Reviewer: Journal of Child Language
· Reviewer: Language Learning
· Reviewer: Child Development
· Reviewer: Developmental Psychology
· Reviewer: Trends in Cognitive Sciences
· Reviewer: Journal of Experimental Child Psychology
· Reviewer: Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry
· Reviewer: Journal of Memory and Language
· Reviewer: Journal of Learning Disabilities