학술논문

Influence of hearing loss on the perceptual strategies of children and adults
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research. Dec, 2002, Vol. 45 Issue 6, p1276, 9 p.
Subject
United States
Language
ISSN
1092-4388
Abstract
To accommodate growing vocabularies, young children are thought to modify their perceptual weights as they gain experience with speech and language. The purpose of the present study was to determine whether the perceptual weights of children and adults with hearing loss differ from those of their normal-hearing counterparts. Adults and children with normal hearing and with hearing loss served as participants. Fricative and vowel segments within consonant-vowel-consonant stimuli were presented at randomly selected levels under two conditions: unaltered and with the formant transition removed. Overall performance for each group was calculated as a function of segment level. Perceptual weights were also calculated for each group using point-biserial correlation coefficients that relate the level of each segment to performance. Results revealed child-adult differences in overall performance and also revealed an effect of hearing loss. Despite these performance differences, the pattern of perceptual weights was similar across all four groups for most conditions. KEY WORDS: children, adults, speech perception, perceptual strategies
Although considerable work has been conducted on the speech perception strategies of children with normal hearing, little is known about the perceptual strategies of children who must learn speech and [...]