TY - JOUR
T1 - Fricative contrast and coarticulation in children with and without speech sound disorders
AU - Maas, Edwin
AU - Mailend, Marja Liisa
N1 - Funding Information: This work was supported by the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders Grant K01-DC010216, awarded to Edwin Maas. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health. We also thank participants and their families, and members of the SLAB Lab. Thanks also to Kimberly Farinella for clinical evaluations, to Ben Munson for sharing his Praat scripts, and to Diane Ohala for providing pictures of the alien creatures used in this study. A version of this article was presented at the 2016 Conference on Motor Speech (Newport Beach, CA, March 2016). Publisher Copyright: © 2017 American Speech-Language-Hearing Association.
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - Purpose: The purpose of this study was, first, to expand our understanding of typical speech development regarding segmental contrast and anticipatory coarticulation, and second, to explore the potential diagnostic utility of acoustic measures of fricative contrast and anticipatory coarticulation in children with speech sound disorders (SSD). Method: In a cross-sectional design, 10 adults, 17 typically developing children, and 11 children with SSD repeated carrier phrases with novel words with fricatives (/s/,/ʃ/). Dependent measures were 2 ratios derived from spectral mean, obtained from perceptually accurate tokens. Group analyses compared adults and typically developing children; individual children with SSD were compared to their respective typically developing peers. Results: Typically developing children demonstrated smaller fricative acoustic contrast than adults but similar coarticulatory patterns. Three children with SSD showed smaller fricative acoustic contrast than their typically developing peers, and 2 children showed abnormal coarticulation. The 2 children with abnormal coarticulation both had a clinical diagnosis of childhood apraxia of speech; no clear pattern was evident regarding SSD subtype for smaller fricative contrast. Conclusions: Children have not reached adult-like speech motor control for fricative production by age 10 even when fricatives are perceptually accurate. Present findings also suggest that abnormal coarticulation but not reduced fricative contrast is SSD-subtype–specific.
AB - Purpose: The purpose of this study was, first, to expand our understanding of typical speech development regarding segmental contrast and anticipatory coarticulation, and second, to explore the potential diagnostic utility of acoustic measures of fricative contrast and anticipatory coarticulation in children with speech sound disorders (SSD). Method: In a cross-sectional design, 10 adults, 17 typically developing children, and 11 children with SSD repeated carrier phrases with novel words with fricatives (/s/,/ʃ/). Dependent measures were 2 ratios derived from spectral mean, obtained from perceptually accurate tokens. Group analyses compared adults and typically developing children; individual children with SSD were compared to their respective typically developing peers. Results: Typically developing children demonstrated smaller fricative acoustic contrast than adults but similar coarticulatory patterns. Three children with SSD showed smaller fricative acoustic contrast than their typically developing peers, and 2 children showed abnormal coarticulation. The 2 children with abnormal coarticulation both had a clinical diagnosis of childhood apraxia of speech; no clear pattern was evident regarding SSD subtype for smaller fricative contrast. Conclusions: Children have not reached adult-like speech motor control for fricative production by age 10 even when fricatives are perceptually accurate. Present findings also suggest that abnormal coarticulation but not reduced fricative contrast is SSD-subtype–specific.
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U2 - 10.1044/2017_AJSLP-16-0110
DO - 10.1044/2017_AJSLP-16-0110
M3 - Article
C2 - 28654946
SN - 1058-0360
VL - 26
SP - 649
EP - 663
JO - American journal of speech-language pathology
JF - American journal of speech-language pathology
IS - 2Special Issue
ER -