This study reports on a strictly-cognitive and symptomatic approach to the treatment of phonological disorders, by an effect which can also be reproduced in most normally- developing children. To explain how this works, it is necessary to address certain asymmetries and singularities in the distribution of children's speech errors over the whole range of development. Particular words occasion particular errors. In early phonology there is 'fronting' with Coronal displacing Dorsal, and harmonies where Coronal is lost. In the middle of phonological acquisition, the harmonic pattern changes with coronal harmony coming to prevail over other forms. As well as these asymmetries, there is also the case of harmonic or migratory errors involving the...
Children\u27s acquisition of their L1 phonological grammar is typically understood as a gradual prog...
The phonological chain shifts exhibited by children during language development are challenging for ...
This study explores the hypothesis that children identified as having phonological processing proble...
This study investigates the role of articulation, phonological systematicity and individual boldness...
The phonology and clinically induced learning patterns of a female child with a phonological delay (...
This dissertation presents Error-Selective Learning, an error-driven model of phonological acquisiti...
The purpose was to evaluate the lexicality of treated stimuli relative to phonological learning by p...
This dissertation presents Error-Selective Learning, an error-driven model of phonological acquisiti...
Speech errors follow the phonotactics of the language being spoken. For example, in English, if [n] ...
Children with functional phonological disorders warrant clinical treatment to accelerate their acqui...
This is the author's accepted manuscript. The original is available at http://jslhr.pubs.asha.org/ar...
Any phonological theory needs to encompass an account of acquisition and any account of acquisition...
© 2019 Rebecca Emma WaringAll children make errors as they learn to talk, and while the vast majorit...
Speech errors follow the phonotactics of the language being spoken. For example, in English, if [n] ...
Background: A pattern of ingressive substitutions for word-final sibilants can be identified in a sm...
Children\u27s acquisition of their L1 phonological grammar is typically understood as a gradual prog...
The phonological chain shifts exhibited by children during language development are challenging for ...
This study explores the hypothesis that children identified as having phonological processing proble...
This study investigates the role of articulation, phonological systematicity and individual boldness...
The phonology and clinically induced learning patterns of a female child with a phonological delay (...
This dissertation presents Error-Selective Learning, an error-driven model of phonological acquisiti...
The purpose was to evaluate the lexicality of treated stimuli relative to phonological learning by p...
This dissertation presents Error-Selective Learning, an error-driven model of phonological acquisiti...
Speech errors follow the phonotactics of the language being spoken. For example, in English, if [n] ...
Children with functional phonological disorders warrant clinical treatment to accelerate their acqui...
This is the author's accepted manuscript. The original is available at http://jslhr.pubs.asha.org/ar...
Any phonological theory needs to encompass an account of acquisition and any account of acquisition...
© 2019 Rebecca Emma WaringAll children make errors as they learn to talk, and while the vast majorit...
Speech errors follow the phonotactics of the language being spoken. For example, in English, if [n] ...
Background: A pattern of ingressive substitutions for word-final sibilants can be identified in a sm...
Children\u27s acquisition of their L1 phonological grammar is typically understood as a gradual prog...
The phonological chain shifts exhibited by children during language development are challenging for ...
This study explores the hypothesis that children identified as having phonological processing proble...