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Abstract
It is a truism that development involves contributions from both genes and environment,
but theories differ with respect to the roles they attribute to each, which deeply
affects the ways in which developmental disorders are researched. The strict nativist
approach to abnormal phenotypes, inspired by adult neuropsychology and evolutionary
psychology, seeks to identify impairments to domain-specific cognitive modules and
studies the purported juxtaposition of impaired and intact abilities. The neuroconstructivist
approach differs in several respects: (i) it seeks more indirect, lower-level causes
of abnormality than impaired cognitive modules; (ii)modules are thought to emerge
from a developmental process of modularization; (iii) unlike empiricism, neuroconstructivism
accepts some form of innately specified starting points, but unlike nativism, these
are considered to be initially `domain-relevant', only becoming domain-specific with
the process of development and specific environmental interactions; and (iv) different
cognitive disorders are considered to lie on a continuum rather than to be truly specific.
These alternative theoretical positions are briefly considered as they apply to Specific
Language Impairment, and followed by a more detailed case study of a well-defined
neurodevelopmental disorder, Williams syndrome. It is argued that development itself
plays a crucial role in phenotypical outcomes.