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Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Vol.34 921-928 August 1991.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Repair Strategy Usage by Hearing-Impaired Adults and Changes Following Communication Therapy

Nancy Tye-Murray 1
1 Department of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery University of Iowa Iowa City

This investigation documented how hearing-impaired individuals use communication repair strategies in structured settings and determined whether these strategies could be changed by communication therapy. Eight hearing-impaired adults with mild to severe sensorineural hearing losses practiced using five repair strategies when they did not correctly speechread a videotaped sentence. The strategies included asking the talker to (a) repeat the sentence, (b) simplify it, (c) rephrase it, (d) say an important key word, and (e) speak two sentences. Therapy consisted of computerized interactive activities and role-playing with a clinician. Seven hearing-impaired adults served as control subjects and received no therapy. Before and during therapy, subjects usually wanted a misperceived sentence to be repeated. On average, subjects changed their use of repair strategies following therapy. They utilized the repeat strategy less often and other strategies more often.

KEY WORDS: aural rehabilitation, communication therapy, hearing impaired, repair strategies, computer instruction

Submitted on April 3, 1990
Accepted on November 1, 1990


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