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Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Vol.24 351-357 September 1981.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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A Reexamination of Some Nonverbal Perceptual Abilities of Language-Impaired and Normal Children as a Function of Age and Sensory Modality

Paula Tallal 1
Rachel Stark 2
Clayton Kallman 3

David Mellits 3

1 University of California, San Diego Children's Hospital and Health Center
2 Johns Hopkins Hospital and John F. Kennedy Institute Baltimore, Maryland
3 Johns Hopkins School of Medicine Baltimore, Maryland

A battery of nonverbal perceptual and memory tests were given to 35 language-impaired (LI) and 38 control subjects. Three modalities of tests were given: auditory, visual, and cross-modal (auditory and visual). The purpose was to reexamine some nonverbal perceptual and memory abilities of LI children as a function of age and modality of stimulation. Results failed to replicate previous findings of a temporal processing deficit that is specific to the auditory modality in LI children. The LI group made significantly more errors than did controls regardless of modality of stimulation when 2-item sequences were presented rapidly, or when more than two stimuli were presented in series. However, further analyses resolved this apparent conflict between the present and earlier studies by demonstrating that age is an important variable underlying modality specificity of perceptual performance in LI children. Whereas younger LI children were equally impaired when responding to stimuli presented rapidly to the auditory and visual modality, older LI subjects made nearly twice as many errors responding to rapidly presented auditory rather than visual stimuli. This developmental difference did not occur for the control group.

Submitted on February 2, 1980
Accepted on July 25, 1980


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Copyright © 1981 by the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association.