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Gabay, Yafit; Thiessen, Erik D.; Holt, Lori L. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2015
Purpose: Developmental dyslexia (DD) is commonly thought to arise from phonological impairments. However, an emerging perspective is that a more general procedural learning deficit, not specific to phonological processing, may underlie DD. The current study examined if individuals with DD are capable of extracting statistical regularities across…
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Developmental Disabilities, Speech, Acoustics
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Shport, Irina A.; Redford, Melissa A. – Journal of Child Language, 2014
This study investigated the integration of word- and phrase-level prominences in speech produced by twenty-five school-aged children (6;2 to 7;3) and twenty-five adults. Participants produced disyllabic number words in a straight count condition and in two phrasal conditions, namely, a stress clash and non-clash phrasal context. Duration and…
Descriptors: Speech, Young Children, Adults, Syllables
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Karimi, Hamid; O'Brian, Sue; Onslow, Mark; Jones, Mark; Menzies, Ross; Packman, Ann – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2013
Purpose: Researchers have used unscheduled telephone calls for many years during clinical trials to measure adult stuttering severity before and after treatment. Because variability is a hallmark of stuttering severity with adults, it is questionable whether an unscheduled telephone call is truly representative of their everyday speech. Method:…
Descriptors: Syllables, Adults, Stuttering, Telecommunications
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Esteve-Gibert, Nuria; Prieto, Pilar – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2013
Purpose: Previous work on the temporal coordination between gesture and speech found that the prominence in gesture coordinates with speech prominence. In this study, the authors investigated the anchoring regions in speech and pointing gesture that align with each other. The authors hypothesized that (a) in contrastive focus conditions, the…
Descriptors: Suprasegmentals, Intonation, Nonverbal Communication, Speech
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Miller, Karen – Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 2014
Purpose: To examine the production of plural morphology in children acquiring a dialect of Spanish with syllable-final /s/ lenition with the goal of comparing how plural marker omissions in the speech of these children compare with plural marker omissions in children with language impairment acquiring other varieties of Spanish. Method: Three…
Descriptors: Morphology (Languages), Children, Spanish, Dialects
Segawa, Jennifer Anne – ProQuest LLC, 2013
Speech utterances are phoneme sequences but may not always be represented as such in the brain. For instance, electropalatography evidence indicates that as speaking rate increases, gestures within syllables are manipulated separately but those within consonant clusters act as one motor unit. Moreover, speech error data suggest that a syllable's…
Descriptors: Brain, Speech, Neurological Organization, Phonemes
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Whalen, D. H.; Giulivi, Sara; Nam, Hosung; Levitt, Andrea G.; Halle, Pierre; Goldstein, Louis M. – Language and Speech, 2012
Certain consonant/vowel (CV) combinations are more frequent than would be expected from the individual C and V frequencies alone, both in babbling and, to a lesser extent, in adult language, based on dictionary counts: Labial consonants co-occur with central vowels more often than chance would dictate; coronals co-occur with front vowels, and…
Descriptors: English, Speech, Vowels, Oral Language
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Hertrich, Ingo; Dietrich, Susanne; Ackermann, Hermann – Brain and Language, 2013
Blind people can learn to understand speech at ultra-high syllable rates (ca. 20 syllables/s), a capability associated with hemodynamic activation of the central-visual system. To further elucidate the neural mechanisms underlying this skill, magnetoencephalographic (MEG) measurements during listening to sentence utterances were cross-correlated…
Descriptors: Syllables, Oral Language, Blindness, Language Processing
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Neef, Nicole E.; Sommer, Martin; Neef, Andreas; Paulus, Walter; von Gudenberg, Alexander Wolff; Jung, Kristina; Wustenberg, Torsten – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2012
Purpose: In individuals who stutter (IWS), speech fluency can be enhanced by altered auditory feedback, although it has adverse effects in control speakers. This indicates abnormalities in the auditory feedback loop in stuttering. Current motor control theories on stuttering propose an impaired processing of internal forward models that might be…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Stuttering, Phonemes, Phonology
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Trofimovich, Pavel; Isaacs, Talia – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2012
The goal of this study was to determine which linguistic aspects of second language speech are related to accent and which to comprehensibility. To address this goal, 19 different speech measures in the oral productions of 40 native French speakers of English were examined in relation to accent and comprehensibility, as rated by 60 novice raters…
Descriptors: Experienced Teachers, Syllables, French, Pronunciation
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Liu, Fang; Xu, Yi; Patel, Aniruddh D.; Francart, Tom; Jiang, Cunmei – Brain and Cognition, 2012
This study examined whether "melodic contour deafness" (insensitivity to the direction of pitch movement) in congenital amusia is associated with specific types of pitch patterns (discrete versus gliding pitches) or stimulus types (speech syllables versus complex tones). Thresholds for identification of pitch direction were obtained using discrete…
Descriptors: Intonation, Auditory Stimuli, Auditory Perception, Mandarin Chinese
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Sato, Marc; Vallee, Nathalie; Schwartz, Jean-Luc; Rousset, Isabelle – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2007
Purpose: Statistical studies conducted in various languages on both infants and adults have revealed an intersyllabic preference for initiating words with a labial consonant-vowel-coronal consonant sequence. Speech motor constraints have been proposed to explain this so-called "labial-coronal effect." This study was designed to test for a possible…
Descriptors: Statistical Studies, Vowels, Language Processing, Infants