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Vowel perception by adults and children with normal language and specific language impairment: Based on steady states or transitions?

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JOURNAL OF THE ACOUSTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA
卷 109, 期 3, 页码 1173-1180

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AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1121/1.1349428

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The current investigation studied whether adults, children with normally developing language aged 4-5 years, and children with specific language impairment, aged 5-6 years identified vowels on the basis of steady-state or transitional formant frequencies. Four types of synthetic tokens, created with a female voice, served as stimuli: (1) steady-state centers for the vowels [i] and [ae]; (2) voweless tokens with transitions appropriate for [bib] and [b aeb]; (3) ''congruent'' tokens that combined the first two types of stimuli into [bib] and [b aeb]; and (4) conflicting tokens that combined the transitions from Cbib] with the vowel from [b aeb] and vice versa. Results showed that children with language impairment identified the [i] vowel more poorly than other subjects for both the voweless and congruent tokens. Overall, children identified vowels most accurately in steady-state centers and congruent stimuli (ranging between 94%-96%). They identified the vowels on the basis of transitions only from voweless tokens with 89% and 83.5% accuracy for the normally developing and language impaired groups, respectively. Children with normally developing language used steady-state cues to identify vowels in 87% of the conflicting stimuli, whereas children with language impairment did so for 79% of the stimuli. Adults were equally accurate for voweless, steady-state, and congruent tokens (ranging between 99% to 100% accuracy) and used both steady-state and transition cues for vowel identification. Results suggest that most listeners prefer the steady state for vowel identification but are capable of using the onglide/offglide transitions for vowel identification. Results were discussed with regard to Nittrouer's developmental weighting shift hypothesis and Strange and Jenkin's dynamic specification theory. (C) 2001 Acoustical Society of America.

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