A comparative study of the speech-like vocalizations of a deaf infant and a group of 11 hearing infants was conducted in order to examine the role of auditory experience in the development of the phonological and metaphonological capacity. Results indicated that from 8 to 13 months of age, the deaf subject differed strikingly from hearing infants of comparable age. She produced no repetitive canonical babbling, whereas all the hearing infants produced many canonical syllables. The topography of the deaf infant\u27s vocalizations resembled that of 4-6-month-old (i.e., Expansion stage) hearing infants. Detailed comparisons of the proportion of production of various metaphonologically defined categories by the deaf infant and Expansion stage h...
The relationship between the infant's early vocal development and subsequent speech and language de...
Little research has been conducted on the development of suprasegmental characteristics of vocalizat...
Purpose: Onset of canonical babbling by 10 months of age is surprisingly robust in infancy, suggesti...
To determine whether late onset of canonical babbling could be used as a criterion to determine risk...
This chapter examines the shift of perspective that is required in order to elucidate how advances i...
The traditional belief that audition plays only a minor role in infant vocal development depends upo...
Several studies about the speech development of deaf children suggest that their speech development ...
The primary aims of the present investigation were to replicate and extend previous findings regardi...
Purpose: Vocalization development has not been studied thoroughly in infants with early-identified h...
Background and objectivesA set of important pragmatic skills emerge during infancy and pave the way ...
The purpose of this paper is to throw light on the mechanism of developmental process of speech in e...
This study investigated the effects of hearing loss and hearing experience on the acoustic features ...
Intonation contours in the demand utterances of ten hearing impaired infants aged 12 to 24 months an...
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: A set of important pragmatic skills emerge during infancy and pave the wa...
The purpose of this study was to analyze the segmental features of infant speech using sound spectro...
The relationship between the infant's early vocal development and subsequent speech and language de...
Little research has been conducted on the development of suprasegmental characteristics of vocalizat...
Purpose: Onset of canonical babbling by 10 months of age is surprisingly robust in infancy, suggesti...
To determine whether late onset of canonical babbling could be used as a criterion to determine risk...
This chapter examines the shift of perspective that is required in order to elucidate how advances i...
The traditional belief that audition plays only a minor role in infant vocal development depends upo...
Several studies about the speech development of deaf children suggest that their speech development ...
The primary aims of the present investigation were to replicate and extend previous findings regardi...
Purpose: Vocalization development has not been studied thoroughly in infants with early-identified h...
Background and objectivesA set of important pragmatic skills emerge during infancy and pave the way ...
The purpose of this paper is to throw light on the mechanism of developmental process of speech in e...
This study investigated the effects of hearing loss and hearing experience on the acoustic features ...
Intonation contours in the demand utterances of ten hearing impaired infants aged 12 to 24 months an...
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: A set of important pragmatic skills emerge during infancy and pave the wa...
The purpose of this study was to analyze the segmental features of infant speech using sound spectro...
The relationship between the infant's early vocal development and subsequent speech and language de...
Little research has been conducted on the development of suprasegmental characteristics of vocalizat...
Purpose: Onset of canonical babbling by 10 months of age is surprisingly robust in infancy, suggesti...