This study investigated the development of three aspects of linguistic prosody in a group of children with Williams syndrome compared to typically developing children. The prosodic abilities investigated were: (1) the ability to understand and use prosody to make specific words or syllables stand out in an utterance (focus); (2) the ability to understand and use prosody to disambiguate complex noun phrases (chunking); (3) the ability to understand and use prosody to regulate conversational behaviour (turn-end). The data were analysed using a cross-sectional developmental trajectory approach. The results showed that, relative to chronological age, there was a delayed onset in the development of the ability of children with WS to use prosody ...
Title from first page of PDF file (viewed September 13, 2010)Includes bibliographical references (p....
AbstractWilliams Syndrome (WS) is a neurodevelopmental disorder of known genetic origin, characteriz...
Most aspects of human life—from gene expression, to brain structure/function, to underlying linguist...
International audienceThe aim of the present study is to investigate the developmental profile of th...
The aim of the current study was to investigate expressive affect in children with Williams syndrome...
Purpose: The authors investigated expressive and receptive intonation abilities in children with Wil...
The aim of this study was to compare the prosodic profiles of English and Spanish-speaking children ...
Aims: The present study investigated whether children with Williams syndrome (WS) produced a higher ...
International audienceThe purpose of this study was to investigate acoustic specificities of prosody...
The objective of this study was to investigate the psycholinguistic abilities of children with Willi...
This study aimed to compare developmental courses of structural and pragmatic language skills in sch...
Aims: The present study investigated whether children with Williams syndrome (WS) produced a higher ...
Although prior research has indicated that pragmatics is an area of particular weakness for individu...
This project investigated articulation skills in spontaneous speech of individuals with Williams syn...
Background. Many studies have analysed language development in children with Down syndrome to unders...
Title from first page of PDF file (viewed September 13, 2010)Includes bibliographical references (p....
AbstractWilliams Syndrome (WS) is a neurodevelopmental disorder of known genetic origin, characteriz...
Most aspects of human life—from gene expression, to brain structure/function, to underlying linguist...
International audienceThe aim of the present study is to investigate the developmental profile of th...
The aim of the current study was to investigate expressive affect in children with Williams syndrome...
Purpose: The authors investigated expressive and receptive intonation abilities in children with Wil...
The aim of this study was to compare the prosodic profiles of English and Spanish-speaking children ...
Aims: The present study investigated whether children with Williams syndrome (WS) produced a higher ...
International audienceThe purpose of this study was to investigate acoustic specificities of prosody...
The objective of this study was to investigate the psycholinguistic abilities of children with Willi...
This study aimed to compare developmental courses of structural and pragmatic language skills in sch...
Aims: The present study investigated whether children with Williams syndrome (WS) produced a higher ...
Although prior research has indicated that pragmatics is an area of particular weakness for individu...
This project investigated articulation skills in spontaneous speech of individuals with Williams syn...
Background. Many studies have analysed language development in children with Down syndrome to unders...
Title from first page of PDF file (viewed September 13, 2010)Includes bibliographical references (p....
AbstractWilliams Syndrome (WS) is a neurodevelopmental disorder of known genetic origin, characteriz...
Most aspects of human life—from gene expression, to brain structure/function, to underlying linguist...