Children's Recognition of their own Voice: Influence of Phonological Impairment
نویسنده
چکیده
This study explores the ability to identify the recorded voice as one’s own, in three groups of children: one group of children with phonological impairment (PI) and two groups of children with typical speech and language development; 4-5 year-olds and 7-8 year-olds. High average performance rates in all three groups suggest that these children indeed recognize their recorded voice as their own, with no significant difference between the groups. Signs indicating that children with deviant speech use their speech deviance as a cue to identifying their own voice are discussed.
منابع مشابه
Self-voice Identification in Children with Phonological Impairment
We report preliminary data from a study of selfvoice identification in children with phonological impairment (PI), where results from 13 children with PI are compared to results from a group of children with typical speech. No difference between the two groups was found, suggesting that a phonological impairment does not affect children’s ability to recognize their recorded voices as their own....
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