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Speech adaptation in children with phonological disorders using accented sentences

Title
Speech adaptation in children with phonological disorders using accented sentences
Authors
Yim D.
Ewha Authors
임동선
SCOPUS Author ID
임동선scopus
Issue Date
2013
Journal Title
Communication Sciences and Disorders
ISSN
2288-1328JCR Link
Citation
Communication Sciences and Disorders vol. 18, no. 1, pp. 98 - 106
Keywords
Accented speechChildren with phonological disordersContextual cueSpeech adaptationSpeech variation
Publisher
Korean Academy of Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology
Indexed
SCOPUS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Objectives: The purposes of this study were to investigate how children with phonological disorders (PD) process speech variation defined as accented speech and to examine perceptual adaptability by contextual cue of the accented speech. Methods: A total of 55 children (4-8 years old) participated in the study across two days. Accented sentences, spoken by a foreigner, were composed of two different contexts; low and high. Children were to listen to each sentence and identify the last word of each sentence on the screen as depicted by a picture. A separate three-way mixed ANOVA (group × day × context) was used to analyze the data. Additionally, stepwise multiple regression analysis was used to test which variables predicted the children's adaptability. Results: First, no main effect of group but day effect and significant interaction effect of group×day and context × day was found. For RT, there was no main effect of group but day effect was found and interaction effect of group × day did not reach the conventional significant level. Second, it was articulation accuracy which predicted both groups' adaptability accuracy scores. However, expressive vocabulary scores significantly predicted children with PD's adaptability of response time differently from typically developing children. Conclusion: Results indicated that children with PD, as well as typically developing children, have good speech adaptability. Speech variation and adaptability may be important factors to consider when clinically assessing children's speech processing and language skills, as well as when designing and implementing therapy tasks. © 2013 Korean Academy of Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology.
DOI
10.12963/csd.13010
Appears in Collections:
사범대학 > 언어병리학과 > Journal papers
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