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Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research Vol.42 1042-1060 October 1999.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Speech-Sound Discrimination in School-Age Children

Psychophysical and Neurophysiologic Measures

Nina Kraus 1
Dawn Burton Koch 1
Therese J. McGee 1
Trent G. Nicol 1

Jenna Cunningham 1

1 Communication Sciences and Disorders Neurobiology and Physiology, Otolaryngology Northwestern University Evanston, IL

nkraus{at}nwu.edu

This study measured behavioral speech-sound discrimination and a neurophysiologic correlate of discrimination in normal school-age children (ages 6 to 15) to determine if developmental effects exist. Just noticeable differences (JNDs) and mismatch responses (MMNs) were assessed for synthetic syllables that differed in third-formant onset frequency (/da-ga/) and formant transition duration (/ba-wa/). These stimuli were selected because children with learning problems often find it difficult to discriminate rapid spectrotemporal changes like /da-ga/, whereas the ability to distinguish /ba-wa/ is relatively unimpaired. Results indicate that JNDs for /da-ga/ show no developmental effects and that JNDs for /ba-wa/ decrease slightly with age (although likely for task-related reasons). MMNs elicited by two /da-ga/ stimulus pairs (onset frequency differences=20 Hz, 280 Hz) and three /ba-wa/ stimulus pairs (transition duration differences=3, 5, 15 ms) showed no systematic or significant differences for onset latency, duration, or area as a function of age. Normative JND and MMN data are provided. These norms provide a metric against which children with suspected central auditory processing difficulties or auditory-based language disorders can be compared.

KEY WORDS: auditory development, learning disabilities, speech-sound perception, central auditory physiology, mismatch negativity

Submitted on November 17, 1998
Accepted on March 29, 1999


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J. Neurosci.Home page
K. Banai, T. Nicol, S. G. Zecker, and N. Kraus
Brainstem Timing: Implications for Cortical Processing and Literacy
J. Neurosci., October 26, 2005; 25(43): 9850 - 9857.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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