Literature DB >> 3945058

Babbling development of hearing-impaired and normally hearing subjects.

C Stoel-Gammon, K Otomo.   

Abstract

Phonetic transcriptions of babbling samples from 11 normally hearing subjects, age 4-18 months, were compared with samples from 11 hearing-impaired subjects, age 4-28 months. Longitudinal data were available for all hearing babies and for 8 of the 11 hearing-impaired subjects. The analysis focused on two measures: (a) size of consonantal repertoire over time and (b) proportional occurrence of multisyllabic consonant-vowel utterances. On average, the normally hearing subjects evidenced an increase in size of their consonantal repertoires with age; in contrast, the hearing-impaired subjects in the same age range had smaller repertoires that decreased over time. Comparison of multisyllabic utterances revealed a general tendency for the hearing-impaired subjects to produce fewer multisyllabic utterances containing true consonants and for some of the hearing-impaired children to produce a high proportion of vocalizations with glides or glottal stops. These findings suggest both qualitative and quantitative differences in the babbling of the two groups.

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Year:  1986        PMID: 3945058     DOI: 10.1044/jshd.5101.33

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Speech Hear Disord        ISSN: 0022-4677


  27 in total

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Review 6.  Advantages of comparative studies in songbirds to understand the neural basis of sensorimotor integration.

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7.  Why repetition? Repetitive babbling, auditory feedback, and cochlear implantation.

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8.  Monitoring progress in vocal development in young cochlear implant recipients: relationships between speech samples and scores from the Conditioned Assessment of Speech Production (CASP).

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9.  Automated Vocal Analysis of Children With Hearing Loss and Their Typical and Atypical Peers.

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Review 10.  Motor circuits help encode auditory memories of vocal models used to guide vocal learning.

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