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Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research Vol.50 83-96 February 2007. doi:10.1044/1092-4388(2007/007)
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Effects of Elicitation Task Variables on Speech Production by Children With Cochlear Implants

Elizabeth A. McCleary
Dana L. Ide-Helvie

Boys Town National Research Hospital, Omaha, NE

Andrew J. Lotto
University of Texas at Austin

Arlene Earley Carney
University of Minnesota, Minneapolis

Maureen B. Higgins
Boys Town National Research Hospital

Contact author: Elizabeth A. McCleary, Lied Learning and Technology Center, Boys Town National Research Hospital, 425 North 30th Street, Omaha, NE 68131. E-mail: mccleary_in{at}netzero.com.

Given the interest in comparing speech production development in children with normal hearing and hearing impairment, it is important to evaluate how variables within speech elicitation tasks can differentially affect the acoustics of speech production for these groups. In a first experiment, children (6–14 years old) with cochlear implants produced a set of monosyllabic words either in isolation or while simultaneously signing the word. Acoustical analyses indicated no change in word duration, voice onset time, intensity, or fundamental frequency between isolated and simultaneous signing conditions. In a second experiment, the same children verbally repeated words that were signed by a video model. The model either signed with inflection or without. Words repeated after inflected models were higher in fundamental frequency and intensity and were more intelligible. In addition, children with poorer speech perception skills sometimes produced the monosyllables as 2 syllables, but this only occurred for words that had multiple sign movements. The results have implications for the comparison of speech development between children with normal hearing and those with hearing impairment.

KEY WORDS: speech production, cochlear implants, acoustics, simultaneous communication


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