Lecture 5- Pediatric Speech Testing Flashcards
What are internal variables that can affect results and other considerations?
- Developmental age
- Receptive vocabulary
- Language competency
- Cognitive abilities
What are external variables that can affect results and other considerations?
- Designation of appropriate response task
- Effective reinforcement
- Controlling memory load inherent in the task
Describe the PBK Word Lists.
Phonetically balanced word lists
Based on receptive vocabulary of kindergarten children
Normal hearing preschoolers at 3.5 years of age yielded scores substantially lower on the PB-K words than older children
Children with limited vocab. skills may score poorly because the words on the test are too difficult
Describe the WIPI.
- Takes into consideration children with restricted vocabularies who cannot read
- 25 picture plates
- Closed set of six items per picture plate
- Four of the illustrations have words that rhyme, other two are presented as distractors to decrease the probability of a correct guess
Describe the NU-CHIPS.
Northwestern University Children’s Perception of Speech test
- 50 monosyllabic words documented to be in recognition vocab of children with normal hearing as young as 3 years of age
- Children with HL and a receptive language age of at least 2.5 years demonstrate familiarity of the words and pictures
- Closed set of 4, picture-pointing response
- Test items are representative of the most frequently occurring phonemes of English (with exception of initial /r/)
Describe the LNT and MLNT.
Lexical Neighborhood Test (LNT) & Multisyllabic Lexical Neighborhood Test (MLNT)
Lexical characteristics, such as word frequency and lexical similarity have been shown to affect accuracy of spoken word recognition in NH listeners
- “Lexical neighbors”–phonetically similar words that differ by one phoneme from the target words
E.g.: cat, cap, bat, scat, cut, etc.
Words that occur frequently and have few lexical neighbors are considered “easy”
- Words with many lexical neighbors that occur less frequently are considered “hard”
LNT contains 2 lists of “easy” and 2 lists of “hard” monosyllabic words
- MLNT contains 1 “easy” list and 1 “hard” list
- Tests are open-set response format
Scored as percent correct for words and phonemes identified as a function of lexical difficulty
children who have NH
What should audiologists do to assess individuals with limited word rec abilities?
Monosyllabic, Trochee, Spondee (MTS) Test
- 2 presentations of 12 pictured words (4 monosyllables, 4 trochees, 4 spondees)
- Picture pointing task
- 2 scores obtained (# of times correct stress pattern was identified; # of words correctly identified)
Glendonald Auditory Screening Procedure
- Closed set of 12 words, similar to MTS
- 3 monosyllables, 3 trochees, 3 spondees, 3 polysyllables
- 10 common everyday sentences
- Phoneme detection task
Early Speech Perception (ESP) Test
3 sections
- Pattern perception subtest and 2-word identification subtests
- 12-item spondee identification test with each word featuring a different vowel sound
- 12-item monosyllabic word identification test containing similar words
- Low-verbal version of the test is the 4-choice spondee subtest
- Skill Categories: No pattern perception, Consistent pattern perception, Inconsistent word identification, Open-set word recognition
Minimal Auditory Capabilities (MAC) Battery
- 13 auditory tests and 1 speechreading test
- Evaluates phonemic discrimination, sentence identification, suprasegmental features, environmental sounds, and visual enhancement with and without amplification