scholarly journals Early speech-language development in females with Rett syndrome: focusing on the preserved speech variant

2012 ◽  
Vol 54 (5) ◽  
pp. 451-456 ◽  
Author(s):  
PETER B MARSCHIK ◽  
GIORGIO PINI ◽  
KATRIN D BARTL-POKORNY ◽  
MARTIN DUCKWORTH ◽  
MARKUS GUGATSCHKA ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
pp. 1-24
Author(s):  
Margaret CYCHOSZ ◽  
Michelle ERSKINE ◽  
Benjamin MUNSON ◽  
Jan EDWARDS

Abstract This study examined a potential lexicality advantage in young children's early speech production: do children produce sound sequences less accurately in nonwords than real words? Children aged 3;3-4;4 completed two tasks: a real word repetition task and a corresponding nonword repetition task. Each of the 23 real words had a paired consonant-vowel sequence in the nonword in word-initial position (e.g., ‘su’ in [ˈsutkes] ‘suitcase’ and [ˈsudrɑs]). The word-initial consonant-vowel sequences were kept constant between the paired words. Previous work on this topic compared different sequences of paired sounds, making it hard to determine if those results were due to a lexical or phonetic effect. Our results show that children reliably produced consonant-vowel sequences in real words more accurately than nonwords. The effect was most pronounced in children with smaller receptive vocabularies. Together, these results reinforce theories arguing for interactions between vocabulary size and phonology in language development.


2005 ◽  
Vol 1 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 237-264 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patricia K. Kuhl ◽  
Barbara T. Conboy ◽  
Denise Padden ◽  
Tobey Nelson ◽  
Jessica Pruitt

2005 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 237-264 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patricia Kuhl ◽  
Barbara Conboy ◽  
Denise Padden ◽  
Tobey Nelson ◽  
Jessica Pruitt

2010 ◽  
Vol 47 (2) ◽  
pp. 301-339 ◽  
Author(s):  
CRISTINA D. DYE

Since early studies in language development, scholars have noticed that function words, in particular auxiliaries, often appear to be missing in early speech, with the result that child utterances sometimes exhibit verbs with non-finite morphology in seemingly matrix clauses. This has led to the idea of a ‘deficit’ in the child's syntactic representations. In contrast with previous studies, this article explores the possibility that the child's phonology may considerably impact her overt realization of auxiliaries. Specifically, it examines the hypothesis that non-finite verbs in early speech are in fact attempted periphrastics (i.e. auxiliary/modal+non-finite verb) in which the auxiliaries are just reduced phonetically, often to the point where they remain unpronounced. We studied 28 normally developing French-speaking children aged between 23 and 37 months. New observational data uncovered a continuum in a given child's phonetic realizations of auxiliaries. Children showed various levels of auxiliary reduction, suggesting that their non-finite verbs are best analyzed as being part of periphrastics involving an auxiliary form that represents the endpoint on this continuum, i.e. is (completely) deleted. Further examination of these verbs revealed that their semantics corresponds to the semantics of adult periphrastics. Additionally, the results of an experiment where children imitated sentences with either periphrastic or synthetic verbs showed that responses with non-finite verbs were predominantly produced when the target sentence involved a periphrastic, rather than a synthetic verb.


1970 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 672-685
Author(s):  
Ho Kim ◽  
Seunghee Ha

Objectives: Canonical vocalization is an important factor in predicting the early speech-language development of children. This study investigated the characteristics of canonical vocalization and phonological development in children aged 13-16 months with cleft palate at 2-3 months following palatal surgery compared to those of children without cleft palate.Methods: Sixteen children with repaired cleft palate and 16 children without cleft palate participated in the study. The frequency and percentage of canonical vocalization, phoneme inventory, and phonological structures were analyzed from all-day recordings at home and compared between children with and without repaired cleft palate. The relationship between canonical vocalization and phonological development was also examined.Results: Children with repaired cleft palate had a lower rate of canonical vocalization and showed restriction in consonant inventories containing canonical vocalization compared to children without cleft palate. They produced nasals predominantly showing restricted production of stops, and they showed significantly smaller high vowel production than children without cleft palate. They also showed restrictions in the diversity and complexity of phonological structures compared to children without cleft palate. All groups had positive correlations between canonical vocalization ratio and phonological development.Conclusion: This study provided understanding about the phonological development of children with cleft palate following palatal surgery and addressed clinical implications for early intervention.


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