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Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Vol.29 275-281 June 1986.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Use of a Monosyllabic Adaptive Speech Test (MAST) with Young Children

Kerrie Mackie 1
Phillip Dermody 1

1 National Acoustic Laboratories, Sydney, Australia

Sixty children aged 3, 5, and 7 years were tested using a simple up-down adaptive speech threshold procedure. The test stimuli were familiar monosyllabic words presented as a closed set with a picture-pointing response. The results indicate that monosyllabic adaptive speech test (MAST) procedures can be used reliably with children as young as 3 years of age. Thirty of the children also received a different randomization of the same speech stimuli presented at a constant level, equal to their MAST threshold. The results confirmed the accuracy of the MAST estimate of the children's 50% speech threshold. Further support for the validity of the MAST threshold procedure with young children was obtained using a group of 10 children with conductive hearing loss. Their results show a significant correlation between the MAST threshold and pure-tone loss. The data also indicated significant improvement in MAST thresholds over the three age groups investigated. These developmental changes are discussed in terms of a word frequency effect.

Submitted on August 1, 1984
Accepted on December 5, 1985


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