
pmid: 4836046
A repetition task was employed to investigate syntactic patterns of hard-of-hearing children. The subjects were 11 students enrolled in public-school classes for the hard-of-hearing. A matching control group of normal-hearing children was selected from the same schools. It was found that both groups tended to use grammatical constructions rather than nongrammatical approximations. The hard-of-hearing group, however, achieved significantly lower means in each grammatical form tested, and tended to substitute simpler forms. This lower level of performance seemed to represent a difference of degree rather than kind, as the experimental group displayed linguistic performance similar to the control group but showed a general delay in language development.
Psychological Tests, Verbal Behavior, Deafness, Language Development, Discrimination, Psychological, Tape Recording, Auditory Perception, Humans, Speech, Child
Psychological Tests, Verbal Behavior, Deafness, Language Development, Discrimination, Psychological, Tape Recording, Auditory Perception, Humans, Speech, Child
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