Phonetic skills and vocabulary size were investigated in 37 toddlers (24 to 31 months) identified with specific expressive language impairment and 20 comparison toddlers matched on age, SES, and nonverbal ability. The use of consonants was highly consistent across two contexts: 20 minutes of structured testing and 5 minutes of free play. The comparison children produced almost triple the number of consonant types and five times as many consonant tokens as the late talkers. However, the most frequently present consonants were similar across groups, indicating delayed rather than deviant phonetic development in the late talkers. The late talkers used a much higher proportion of their consonants in initial position than did the normally develo...
In the present study, the speech of twenty-four normally speaking toddlers and twenty-eight late tal...
Objectives: The present study focused on examining the continuity and directionality of language ski...
Twenty-one apparently normal children between 18 and 34 months of age with slow expressive language ...
Phonetic skills and vocabulary size were investigated in 37 toddlers (24 to 31 months) identified wi...
Phonetic skills and vocabulary size were investigated in 37 toddlers (24 to 31 months) identified wi...
Phonetic skills and vocabulary size were investigated in 37 toddlers (24 to 31 months) identified wi...
Background. Expressive Late talkers are identified as children with an unusually small productive vo...
Background. Expressive Late talkers are identified as children with an unusually small productive vo...
Background. Expressive Late talkers are identified as children with an unusually small productive vo...
Background: Research spanning more than two decades has emphasised the lexical deficits of late talk...
Late talkers compromise 10-15% of young children. They gain new words more slowly and begin combinin...
Background: Research spanning more than two decades has emphasised the lexical deficits of late talk...
Using online measures of familiar word recognition in the looking-while-listening procedure, this pr...
An estimated 10 to 15% of 2-year-old children gain new words more slowly and begin combining words i...
Toddlers identified as ‘late talkers’ are 2-year-old children with late-developing expressive vocabu...
In the present study, the speech of twenty-four normally speaking toddlers and twenty-eight late tal...
Objectives: The present study focused on examining the continuity and directionality of language ski...
Twenty-one apparently normal children between 18 and 34 months of age with slow expressive language ...
Phonetic skills and vocabulary size were investigated in 37 toddlers (24 to 31 months) identified wi...
Phonetic skills and vocabulary size were investigated in 37 toddlers (24 to 31 months) identified wi...
Phonetic skills and vocabulary size were investigated in 37 toddlers (24 to 31 months) identified wi...
Background. Expressive Late talkers are identified as children with an unusually small productive vo...
Background. Expressive Late talkers are identified as children with an unusually small productive vo...
Background. Expressive Late talkers are identified as children with an unusually small productive vo...
Background: Research spanning more than two decades has emphasised the lexical deficits of late talk...
Late talkers compromise 10-15% of young children. They gain new words more slowly and begin combinin...
Background: Research spanning more than two decades has emphasised the lexical deficits of late talk...
Using online measures of familiar word recognition in the looking-while-listening procedure, this pr...
An estimated 10 to 15% of 2-year-old children gain new words more slowly and begin combining words i...
Toddlers identified as ‘late talkers’ are 2-year-old children with late-developing expressive vocabu...
In the present study, the speech of twenty-four normally speaking toddlers and twenty-eight late tal...
Objectives: The present study focused on examining the continuity and directionality of language ski...
Twenty-one apparently normal children between 18 and 34 months of age with slow expressive language ...