Purpose This study determined the time course of the emergence of prevocalic stop consonants in young children with cleft palate following surgical repair. Method A total of 120 children in four cohorts from three institutions were followed from 12 to 24 months of age: (a) 24 with repaired cleft lip and palate (CLP), (b) 36 with repaired cleft palate only (CP), (c) 33 without clefts but with histories of frequent otitis media and ventilation tubes (OM), and (d) 27 typically developing (TD) children without clefts or OM. Emergence of prevocalic stops and symbolic language skills were determined during administration of the Communication and Symbolic Behavioral Scales Developmental Profile. Parametric survival models were fitted with and without covariates-recruitment site, gender, maternal education level, middle ear status, language ability, and age at surgery for children with clefts-to describe the time course of the emergence of prevocalic stops. Results The estimated age at which 80% of children demonstrated prevocalic stop emergence was 15.0, 15.3, 18.9, and 21.8 months for TD, OM, CP, and CLP groups, respectively ( < .001, unadjusted model). Both CP and CLP cohorts had a significantly longer time to stop emergence than either the TD or OM cohorts, even after adjusting for covariates. Abnormal middle ear status, lower symbolic language ability, and older age at palatal surgery were significantly associated with delayed stop emergence. Conclusions Survival model estimates show that four out of five children with repaired cleft palate will achieve emergence of prevocalic stop consonants by 19-22 months of age, corresponding to 9-12 months following palate repair. Clinical implications are discussed.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1044/2020_JSLHR-20-00282 | DOI Listing |
J Speech Lang Hear Res
January 2021
Department of Dental Ecology, Adams School of Dentistry, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Purpose This study determined the time course of the emergence of prevocalic stop consonants in young children with cleft palate following surgical repair. Method A total of 120 children in four cohorts from three institutions were followed from 12 to 24 months of age: (a) 24 with repaired cleft lip and palate (CLP), (b) 36 with repaired cleft palate only (CP), (c) 33 without clefts but with histories of frequent otitis media and ventilation tubes (OM), and (d) 27 typically developing (TD) children without clefts or OM. Emergence of prevocalic stops and symbolic language skills were determined during administration of the Communication and Symbolic Behavioral Scales Developmental Profile.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Acoust Soc Am
July 1997
Department of Neurology, University of Tübingen, Germany.
The present study investigated the articulatory control of the German vowel quantity contrast, i.e., the phonological difference between short and long vowels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFReaction times (rt's) of 3 M and 6 F Ss aged 57-84 yrs (mn = 69 yrs) with severe Broca's aphasia and of 9 normal matched Ss were measured to taped verbal stimuli (12 word-pairs posing minimal phonemic contrasts; half the contrasts were prevocalic, half postvocalic. Identical words were presented monotically to both ears; difference in manual rt to pictures of these words was taken to indicate ear advantage). The aphasics had limited but reliable auditory comprehension and minimal speech; they evidenced L-ear advantage in rt's although the postvocalic rt as compared with prevocalic rt was normal.
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