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1.
Semin Speech Lang ; 22(3): 175-83; quiz 184, 2001 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11505307

ABSTRACT

In this article, we consider the processes and knowledge involved in decoding and present some instructional guidelines and suggestions for teaching students the skills necessary for proficient and fluent word reading. The roles and responsibilities of speech-language pathologists (SLPs) are also considered. It may have been enough several years ago for SLPs to focus solely on early literacy skills and phonological awareness. This is not the case today. SLPs not only need to collaborate with teachers to develop a comprehensive approach to literacy, but also should be providing direct, explicit instruction of decoding skills for students with language and learning disabilities.


Subject(s)
Educational Status , Language , Reading , Role , Speech-Language Pathology , Verbal Learning , Awareness , Humans , Phonetics , Recognition, Psychology , Vocabulary , Workforce
2.
Logoped Phoniatr Vocol ; 25(1): 29-34, 2000.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10937294

ABSTRACT

A number of factors contribute to proficient word recognition, including phonological awareness and the ability to make orthographic analogies. The present study considered the relative contribution analogy abilities make toward early reading ability. Two analogy tasks and measures of phonological awareness, orthographic knowledge, visual memory, general language ability, and non-verbal intelligence were administered to 20 second grade good readers and 20 third and fourth grade poor readers. The analogy tasks did make a significant contribution to early reading ability; however, the analogy tasks were not very different from the measures of reading they predicted. In other words, it seems difficult to isolate the use of analogies from basic phonological decoding abilities.


Subject(s)
Dyslexia , Learning , Reading , Analysis of Variance , Child , Female , Humans , Linguistics , Male , Regression Analysis
3.
J Learn Disabil ; 29(3): 259-70, 1996 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8732887

ABSTRACT

The present study examined (a) the relative impact visual and phonetic factors have on learning phoneme-grapheme correspondences, and (b) the relationship between measures of visual and phonological processing and children's ability to learn novel phoneme-grapheme correspondence pairs. Participants were 20 children with reading disabilities (RD), 10 normally achieving children matched for mental age (MA), and 10 children matched for reading age (RA). The children ranged in age from 5 years 2 months to 9 years 3 months. All children completed a phoneme-grapheme learning task consisting of four novel correspondence pairs, a visual processing task, and five measures of phonological processing. The MA and RA groups learned the four correspondence pairs in significantly fewer trials than the RD group. The RD group had the least difficulty learning the correspondence pair with different phonemes and graphemes and the most difficulty learning the correspondence pair with similar phonemes and graphemes. Performance on the learning task was significantly correlated to performance on the visual processing task and the five measures of phonological processing. Performance on the phonological processing task of short-term memory was the best predictor of overall performance on the learning task. Although children with RD were able to learn the four novel correspondence pairs, their processing deficiencies affected how readily they learned each of the correspondence pairs.


Subject(s)
Dyslexia/diagnosis , Language Development , Phonetics , Reading , Child , Dyslexia/psychology , Female , Humans , Male , Memory, Short-Term
4.
J Speech Hear Res ; 38(5): 1108-16, 1995 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8558879

ABSTRACT

The present study examined Cromer's (1983) claim that children with language impairments have a hierarchical planning deficit that affects language as well as performance on complex construction tasks. Subjects were 30 boys (ages 5-7 years), 15 with specific language impairments (SLI) and 15 with normally developing language. Children were asked to build four hierarchical structures: a block construction, a puzzle construction, a simple straw construction, and a complex straw construction. Children who failed to complete the complex straw construction were taught how to construct the model using a sequential strategy. The two groups tended to perform comparably on the block and complex straw construction, the easiest and hardest of the four constructions. The two groups performed least comparably on the puzzle, simple straw construction, and the training task. On the basis of these findings and recent work by Greenfield (1991), we concluded that it is time to reject the notion that a central hierarchical planning mechanism underlies language and non-language structures that contain hierarchical components. The possible exception is early in development before language and manual actions become more autonomous and modular in nature.


Subject(s)
Language Disorders/diagnosis , Child , Child Language , Child, Preschool , Cognition , Humans , Language Development , Language Tests , Male
5.
J Speech Hear Res ; 38(3): 630-42, 1995 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7674656

ABSTRACT

This study examined novel word-learning abilities in young school-age children with mild-to-moderate hearing losses. We questioned whether degree of hearing loss or measures of language and phonological processing abilities were more likely to be related to novel word-learning ability. Subjects were 20 children with hearing impairment (M = 9:0) and 20 children with normal hearing (M = 6:5) matched for receptive vocabulary knowledge. Children were administered measures of language and phonological processing. The novel word-learning task consisted of an acquisition and retention phase in which children received a series of trials to learn to produce four novel words. Half of the children with hearing impairment performed comparably to the children with normal hearing on all of the measures obtained, whereas the the other 10 children with hearing impairment performed more poorly than the higher functioning children with hearing impairment and all of the children with normal hearing on most of the measures of language, phonological processing, and novel word learning. Degree of hearing loss was not related to language or word-learning abilities. These findings suggest that the population of children with mild-to-moderate hearing loss may contain two distinct groups: a group of normally developing children who have a hearing loss and a group of children with language impairment who have a hearing loss. The implications of this categorization will be discussed.


Subject(s)
Child Language , Hearing Loss, Sensorineural , Hearing , Language Development , Verbal Learning , Audiometry, Pure-Tone , Auditory Threshold , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Hearing Loss, Sensorineural/diagnosis , Humans , Male , Speech Perception , Task Performance and Analysis , Vocabulary
6.
Mil Med ; 160(5): 219-22, 1995 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7659208

ABSTRACT

The purposes of this study were to determine the incidence of significant threshold shift (STS) for a large number of Naval fleet personnel, evaluate hearing conservation program (HCP) compliance for a large number of Naval ships, and determine whether two currently used compliance measures are useful means of evaluating HCP effectiveness. Data were collected from 12,492 medical records of 154 ships/submarines regarding STS incidence and follow-up, percent of valid audiograms, and other HCP elements. Data analyses suggested that STS incidence (29%) and follow-up compliance (62%) among fleet personnel may be too high and low, respectively, although audiogram compliance is 80.0 to 92.9%. Also, checklists commonly used to evaluate HCP compliance were not highly correlated with STS incidence. The data support literature recommendations for audiometric data base analyses to evaluate HCP effectiveness and for training for medical officers involved in the HCP. Recommendations and future implications are discussed.


Subject(s)
Hearing Loss, Noise-Induced/prevention & control , Military Personnel , Occupational Diseases/prevention & control , Audiometry , Follow-Up Studies , Hearing Loss, Noise-Induced/etiology , Humans , Incidence , Naval Medicine , Noise/adverse effects , Patient Compliance , Program Evaluation , United States
7.
J Speech Hear Res ; 35(5): 1064-75, 1992 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1447918

ABSTRACT

Factors influencing the occurrence of trade-off effects among linguistic components were examined. Several linguistic measures were used to represent syntactic and phonological production in order to determine whether interrelationship patterns would vary across measures. Linguistic interactions present in imitated speech were compared to those from spontaneous speech. Group effects were explored by comparing data from children with language-learning disabilities, children with reading disabilities, and normally developing children. Results indicated trade-offs between some linguistic measures and positive relationships among others. More trade-offs were present in imitated speech than in spontaneous utterances. In general, interrelationship patterns were similar across groups. Interpretation of these results in reference to current models of sentence production is offered.


Subject(s)
Language Disorders/diagnosis , Phonetics , Semantics , Child , Child Language , Female , Humans , Intelligence Tests , Language Disorders/classification , Language Tests , Male , Speech
8.
J Speech Hear Res ; 34(3): 549-58, 1991 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2072679

ABSTRACT

This study explored the effects of contextual support, discourse genre, and the listener's knowledge of information on syntactic and phonologic production and fluency. Subjects were language-learning-disabled, reading-disabled, and normal primary school children. Clause structure complexity, fluency, and grammatical and phonemic accuracy tended to be highest when children were discussing absent referents, providing explanations and stories, and giving unshared information. These effects were generally the same across all groups, although some effects were significant for only the language-learning-disabled children. Several explanations for these findings are considered.


Subject(s)
Language Development Disorders/diagnosis , Speech Production Measurement/methods , Child , Cues , Educational Status , Humans , Language Development Disorders/etiology , Language Development Disorders/physiopathology , Linguistics , Psycholinguistics , Speech Production Measurement/standards
9.
J Learn Disabil ; 23(10): 632-6, 1990 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2280173

ABSTRACT

The purpose of the present study was to further examine speech production abilities of young poor readers. Fourteen poor readers and 14 age-matched nondisabled subjects were taught to produce four novel, multisyllabic nonsense words. A recognition task was part of the training procedure. Retention of the words was also probed. The poor readers took significantly longer than the nondisabled children to produce three of the four words. The recognition data indicated that encoding limitations, rather than speech production limitations, were primarily responsible for the longer acquisition times. Speech production deficiencies seemed to account for only a small portion of the difficulty the poor readers experienced learning the novel words. The data are consistent with previous research that has documented encoding limitations in poor readers.


Subject(s)
Articulation Disorders/diagnosis , Dyslexia/diagnosis , Language Development Disorders/diagnosis , Speech Production Measurement , Articulation Disorders/psychology , Child , Dyslexia/psychology , Female , Humans , Language Development Disorders/psychology , Male , Mental Recall , Phonetics
10.
J Learn Disabil ; 23(8): 476-82, 1990 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2246599

ABSTRACT

Metaphoric competence was examined in two groups of children with learning disabilities and one group of nondisabled peers ranging in age from 9-0 to 11-0 years. There were five girls and seven boys in each group. One group of students with learning disabilities had a history of spoken language impairment and the other group did not. Subjects were administered three verbal metaphor tasks (comprehension, preference, and completion) and a visual metaphor task, the Metaphor Triads Task (MTT). The three verbal metaphor tasks were administered in three contexts: (a) sentence, (b) story, and (c) story plus visual (pictorial) support. The group with a history of language impairment consistently performed more poorly on the metaphor tasks than the group without a history of language impairment, who, in turn, performed more poorly than the nondisabled children on all but the MTT. Context variations had no effect on children's performance. Theoretical and clinical implications will be discussed.


Subject(s)
Concept Formation , Language Development Disorders/diagnosis , Learning Disabilities/diagnosis , Semantics , Aphorisms and Proverbs as Topic , Child , Female , Humans , Male
11.
J Speech Hear Res ; 33(2): 375-9, 1990 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2359277

ABSTRACT

This research note presents the results of a content analysis of the Columbia Mental Maturity Scale and the Test of Nonverbal Intelligence (TONI). We also compared the intratest performance of a selected sample of language-impaired (LI) and MA-matched normal language children on these two tests. These analyses are an extension of Johnston's (1982) report on the Leiter. The content analysis revealed differences in the nature of perceptual and conceptual items on the Columbia and the TONI. Consistent with Johnston's findings, the intratest comparisons revealed no significant group differences. LI and normal-language children performed significantly better on the perceptual-type items than the conceptual-type items. The predominance of perceptual items was particularly evident in the TONI.


Subject(s)
Intelligence Tests/standards , Language Development Disorders/physiopathology , Nonverbal Communication , Child, Preschool , Cognition , Evaluation Studies as Topic , Humans , Intelligence , Intelligence Tests/instrumentation , Language Development Disorders/diagnosis , Memory , Perception , Reproducibility of Results , Thinking
12.
J Speech Hear Disord ; 55(1): 140-8, 1990 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2299830

ABSTRACT

In this study, the trial-by-trial acquisition procedures developed by Gholson, Eymard, Morgan, and Kamhi (1987) were used to examine analogical reasoning processes in school-age language-impaired (LI) children and normal age peers. Subjects were 16 LI and 16 normally developing children between the ages 6:4 and 8:9 years. Half of the subjects heard only verbal presentations of the problems, whereas the other half heard the verbal presentations while simultaneously viewing physical demonstrations of the problems. The LI children who heard only verbal presentations of the problems took significantly longer to acquire the problem solutions than the other LI children and the normal children in both conditions. There were no differences in children's performance on the transfer task. Theoretical and clinical implications of the findings are discussed.


Subject(s)
Language Disorders/psychology , Learning , Problem Solving , Transfer, Psychology , Child , Humans , Imitative Behavior , Mental Recall , Verbal Behavior
13.
J Speech Hear Disord ; 53(3): 316-27, 1988 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3398484

ABSTRACT

In the present study, we further examined (see Kamhi & Catts, 1986) the phonological processing abilities of language-impaired (LI) and reading-impaired (RI) children. We also evaluated these children's ability to process spatial information. Subjects were 10 LI, 10 RI, and 10 normal children between the ages of 6:8 and 8:10 years. Each subject was administered eight tasks: four word repetition tasks (monosyllabic, monosyllabic presented in noise, three-item, and multisyllabic), rapid naming, syllable segmentation, paper folding, and form completion. The normal children performed significantly better than both the LI and RI children on all but two tasks: syllable segmentation and repeating words presented in noise. The LI and RI children performed comparably on every task with the exception of the multisyllabic word repetition task. These findings were consistent with those from our previous study (Kamhi & Catts, 1986). The similarities and differences between LI and RI children are discussed.


Subject(s)
Dyslexia/psychology , Language Development Disorders/psychology , Mental Processes , Phonetics , Child , Female , Humans , Male , Psychological Tests , Space Perception
14.
J Speech Hear Disord ; 52(1): 36-43, 1987 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3807343

ABSTRACT

The hypothesis-testing abilities of 15 language-impaired and 15 normally developing children matched for mental age were investigated using discrimination-learning tasks. The subjects in both groups were presented with two sets of discrimination-learning problems. One set of problems featured explicit input concerning the correct response choice. The other set of problems featured nonexplicit input. The results revealed both differences in the performance of the MA-matched and language-impaired children and differences in performance on the two types of problems. The children in both groups solved more of the explicit input problems than the nonexplicit input problems. In addition, the MA-matched children performed significantly better than the language-impaired children, particularly on the nonexplicit problems. The findings suggested that the language-impaired children exhibited deficits in solving discrimination-learning problems. The deficits exhibited by the language-impaired children seemed related to deficits in their ability to encode information.


Subject(s)
Child Development , Cognition , Discrimination Learning , Language Development Disorders/psychology , Child , Form Perception , Humans , Intelligence , Language Development , Memory, Short-Term , Problem Solving , Psycholinguistics
15.
J Speech Hear Disord ; 51(4): 337-47, 1986 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3773490

ABSTRACT

The primary purpose of this study was to compare the ability of language-impaired and reading-impaired children to process (i.e., encode and retrieve) phonological information. Four measures of phonological awareness and several measures of word and sentence repetition abilities were used to evaluate phonological processing skills. Two additional measures assessed children's awareness of lexical and morphological information. Subjects were 12 language-impaired (LI), 12 reading-impaired (RI), and 12 normal children between the ages of 6 and 8 years. The findings supported previous claims that children with reading impairments have difficulty processing phonological information. To our surprise, however, the LI children performed significantly worse than the RI children on only three measures, all involving word and sentence repetition. These findings raise questions about the distinctiveness of school-age children with a history of language impairment and poor readers with no history of language impairment.


Subject(s)
Dyslexia/diagnosis , Language Disorders/diagnosis , Child , Female , Humans , Male , Psycholinguistics , Speech Production Measurement
18.
J Speech Hear Disord ; 50(2): 207-12, 1985 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3990265

ABSTRACT

The present investigation evaluated language-disordered children's metalinguistic awareness of words, syllables, and sounds. Subjects were 15 language-disordered children matched for mental age to 15 normally developing children and for language age to another 15 normally developing children. In the first task, children were asked to divide sentences, bisyllabic words, and monosyllabic words into smaller units. In the second task, children were asked several questions designed to assess their word awareness. The language-disordered children performed significantly poorer than both groups of normally developing children in dividing sentences and words. The language-disordered children also did not show the same level of responses to the word-awareness questions as the normally developing children. These findings indicate that language-disordered children's metalinguistic deficit is not limited to difficulty making grammatical judgments. Importantly, these disordered children's lack of word, syllable, and sound awareness places them significantly at risk for future academic difficulties, in particular, learning how to read.


Subject(s)
Awareness , Cognition , Language Development , Language Disorders/psychology , Linguistics , Child , Child Language , Child, Preschool , Dyslexia/etiology , Female , Humans , Language Tests , Learning Disabilities/etiology , Male , Risk
19.
J Speech Hear Res ; 27(4): 556-61, 1984 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6521462

ABSTRACT

This longitudinal study examined individual patterns and changes in /s/ + stop cluster simplifications of six normally developing children. Subjects produced selected words containing initial voiced and voiceless stops and /s/ + stop clusters at monthly intervals. Speech samples were transcribed phonetically, and voice onset times (VOT) of the stop consonants were measured. The results revealed that subjects reduced clusters most frequently to stop consonants with short-lag VOTs. However, two children also occasionally employed prevoicing, and one subject used long-lag VOTs in cluster-reduced stops. Because cluster-reduced stops and voiced singleton stops were generally produced with similar VOTs, it was concluded that subjects represented clustered stops most frequently as phonemically voiced.


Subject(s)
Phonetics , Speech , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Infant , Male , Speech Acoustics
20.
J Speech Hear Res ; 27(3): 329-38, 1984 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6482401

ABSTRACT

This study examined the effects of variations in language complexity on young children's phonological accuracy and consistency of target words. A more general intent was to understand better the way in which developmental level and children's tolerance of speech variability influenced the management of processing demands. Seven children aged 22-34 months were seen six times over a 4-month period. During these sessions, children were presented with an elicited imitation task consisting of 18 stimulus words, each of which occurred in eight sentences of varying language complexity. Younger children in Language Stage III were found to be more influenced by changes in language complexity than older children in Language Stages IV and V. Within-stage differences were also found. Moreover, in contrast to previous research, children showed as many improvements in phonological accuracy with increases in language complexity as they did decreases in phonological accuracy. It was suggested that between-stage differences were primarily caused by differences in developing speech, language, and cognitive abilities, whereas within-stage differences were primarily caused by differences in the extent to which children tolerated variability in their speech. Based on this contention, some speculations were offered concerning the way in which normal and disordered children manage processing demands.


Subject(s)
Language Development , Language Tests , Speech Articulation Tests , Speech Production Measurement , Child Language , Child, Preschool , Cognition , Female , Humans , Infant , Male
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