Chapter 3 Flashcards

1
Q

What do studies show about auditory discrimination?

A
  • infants start hearing sounds about about the 20th week of gestation
  • 2-7 day olds localize rattling noises
  • by 4 months, they can discriminate by localization, fundamental frequency, intensity, duration
  • infants prefer human speech and mother’s voice to other sounds and voices
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2
Q

Speech perception 2-4 months of age

A
  • seem to hear in categories - if obstruents change to continuants, the suck suck swallow pattern changes and/or they turn their head
  • they hear plosives or stops better than fricatives
  • can discriminate velars from alveolars
  • can discriminate stress changes (intonation, prosody)
  • can discriminate between /a, i, u/
  • like ‘motherese’
  • have difficulty with embedded stops in intervocalic position (might lead to WSD)
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3
Q

Speech Perception 5-12 months

A
  • better discrimination ( /sa/ vs /za/ can be discriminated around 6-8m)
  • Around 8 months can be taught to discriminate sounds of other languages (less able to do that at 12mos because they start forming bins of their own language)
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4
Q

Why is speech perception important to us when the child is under 12m?

A

If child isn’t making sounds by 12 months, we can find out if its a hearing problem
•Early Intervention
• more preemies being born with feeding, swallowing, hearing problems (speech overlaid function)

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5
Q

Questions to ask parents that might help us understand child’s auditory perceptions?

A
  • Does your child stop crying when you talk to her?
  • Does your child differentiate your voice from a sibling?
  • When you stop talking, does she “fill in” the silence?
  • does your child turn her head to loud sounds?
  • does she react to your stress/different tones?
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6
Q

Why are Infant Sound Productions so limited?

A
  • Short Vocal Tract
  • Short Pharyngeal Cavity
  • Anterior tongue placement
  • High larynx
  • Close approximation of velopharynx & epiglottis
  • Begin to approximate adult shape at 6-8 mos.
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7
Q

Oller’s 5 Stages

A
  1. Phonation
  2. Coo and Goo
  3. Exploration/expansion
  4. Reduplicated Babbling
  5. Variegated Babbling
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8
Q

Oller Stage 1

A

Phonation Stage
• 0-1 month of age
• Reflexive vocalizations: crying, fussing, Coughing, sneezing, burping for attention, hunger
• Syllabic nasals, but with limited resonance
• Non-distress sounds

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9
Q

Oller Stage 2

A
Coo and Goo Stage
• 2-3 months
• Primitive sounds - irregular timing 
• Velar consonant-like sounds
• A sound similar to rounded vowel /u/
• Tongue clicks at back
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10
Q

Oller Stage 3

A

Exploration/Expansion Stage
• 4-6months
• Better control of laryngeal pharynx & articulators
• Improved oral resonance of vowels (more adult like)
• Squeals, growls, raspberries, friction noises
• Vocal play stage
• Begin to see VC and CV—with “not great” constriction

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11
Q

Oller Stage 4

A

Reduplicated Babbling (Canonical)
• 7-9 months of age; no later than 10 mos.
• Better oral (& nasal) resonation: better controlled
• C1V1C1V1 (bababa) and C1V1C1V2 (bababo) , but not used with intent; i.e., reduplication
• stops, nasals, glides,/ɛ, ɪ, ʌ/
• Velar-like sounds decrease (babies are moving around more, spending less time on their backs)
• Bilabial and alveolar usage increases
• Unaided deaf children often don’t reach this stage by 1 year of age

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12
Q

Oller Stage 5

A

Variegated Babbling Stage
• 10-12 months
• Non-reduplicated babbling, i.e., consonants and vowels may change
• Intonation pattern matures
• Connected strings resemble jargon/adult speech
• Vowels are beginning to stabilize: /ɛ, i, ʊ, ʌ, ɪ, æ, ɑ/
• Babbling often continues into the First-Word stage

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13
Q

Longitudinal Studies

A

• Researchers follow a small # of children individually over a considerable amount of time

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14
Q

Cross Sectional Studies

A
  • Study includes cross-section of children in the US by age, gender, culture, ses, city, iq.
  • Yeilds average group data
  • Attempts to determine “age of mastery”
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15
Q

Place aquisition

A

stops > nasals > fricatives

• stops more common because they can’t control the stream of air for nasals and fricatives; lack of control

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16
Q

Development of manner

A

labials > alveloars > velars

17
Q

Variegated babbling

A
  • 9-10 months

* not reduplicated - vowels and consonants may change

18
Q

Reduplicated babbling

A
  • starts around 7m

* repeated consonant and vowel syllable sequences; vowel may vary, consonant generally stays the same

19
Q

Jargon

A
  • 10 months
  • variegated babbling with intonation patterns and adult-like prosody
  • productions can’t be understood based solely on articulated sounds (gestures and pointing help)
20
Q

Protowords/vocables

A
  • a child’s first meaningful productions
  • not true adult words, but have meaning to the child
  • phonetically consistent, invented words, and quasi-words
  • frequently tied to specific context and often accompanied by consistent gesture
  • constrastive stress used to differentiate meaning
21
Q

Phonetic forms in protowords

A
  1. Single or repeated vowels
  2. syllabic nasals
  3. syllabic fricatives
  4. single or repeated consonant-vowel syllables in which the consonant is a nasal or a stop
22
Q

True/Real words

A
  • 9-18 months (may coexist with protowords)

* a stable phonetic form similar to the adult word form (produced consistently in a particular context)

23
Q

Transition to true words begins with

A
  • Comprehension (not a speech system, but signals beginning of physical production of words)
  • they begin to understand what it is the adult is saying to them
24
Q

Purpose of protowords

A
  1. expression of affect
  2. make a request
  3. focus attention
25
Q

Issue with Transition Period (3)

A
  • words are symbolic of the ability of the brain to program the articulation of the sound sequences
  • physical readiness of the structures and their ability to handle more complex programming
  • linking of sound patterns, physical agility, and the neural programming ability with meaning
26
Q

Templin regarding “mastery” of sound

A

Used 480 children between 3-8y in cross sectional study…

•75% of children have to have consonant correct in all 3 positions to be considered mastered

27
Q

Fudala & Reynolds

A
  • 1986
  • Arizona Articulation Proficiency Scale
    • 5000 children from 4 western states
  • 1.6 - 13.11 years
28
Q

Earliest sounds to develop

A

nasals, stops, and glides

29
Q

later sounds to develop

A

fricatives, affricates, liquids and glides

30
Q

Fudala and Reynolds have most sounds mastered by what age?

A

5.6

31
Q

Templin has sounds mastered by what age?

A

7

32
Q

What do longitudinal studies show?

A

Individual differences in the aquision of articulation and phonological skills

33
Q

Stoel-Gammon Longitudinal study

A

1985, 34 children 15-24 months
• children started at 9 months and samples were collected every 3 months
• early phonemic inventories in initial position were anterior stops, nasals, glides.
• 24 months - voiceless stops, velars, some fricatives

34
Q

DF development order (6)

A
Nasals
Bilabials & alveolars
voice
velars
stridents 
continuants
35
Q

Speech problems associated with hearing loss (6)

A
  1. FCD
  2. imprecise vowels
  3. varying resonance
  4. inappropriate stress & intonation
  5. Variable pitch and control
  6. variable vocal quality
36
Q

Chronic Serous Otitis Media

A

Decreased speech discrimination scores
Decreased auditory discrimination
Auditory processing diagnosis

37
Q

tongue thrust red flags

A
  • tongue protrusion during open lip swallows
  • dec’d masseter movement during swallow
  • Pursing of lips during swallow
  • Lower carriage of tongue at rest than normal