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Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Vol.23 802-813 December 1980.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Delayed Auditory Feedback with Children

Gerald M. Siegel 1
Christine A. Fehst 1
Sharon R. Garber 1

Herbert L. Pick Jr. 1

1 University of Minnesota, Minneapolis

There is a controversy in the literature concerning the effects of delayed auditory feedback (DAF) on the speech of subjects of varying ages, In the current experiment the subjects were five-year-olds, eight-year-olds and adult speakers who performed a sentence repetition task under: 0-delay, 250, 375, 500, and 625 msec of amplified delayed auditory feedback. All subjects performed the task under normal rate instructions and under instructions to speak as rapidly as possible. A developmental pattern emerged, with the youngest children significantly more affected by the DAF than the older children or the adults. There was only weak evidence for a critical delay interval that varied according to age of the subjects. Rate instructions had essentially no effect on the DAF or age patterns.

Submitted on July 13, 1979
Accepted on August 21, 1979


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