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Phonetic variability in residual speech sound disorders exploration of subtypes
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Preston, Jonathan L. (Author)
- Koenig, Laura L. (Author)
Title
Phonetic variability in residual speech sound disorders exploration of subtypes
Abstract
Purpose: To explore whether subgroups of children with residual speech sound disorders (R-SSDs) can be identified through multiple measures of token-to-token phonetic variability (changes in one spoken production to the next). Method: Children with R-SSDs were recorded during a rapid multisyllabic picture naming task and an oral diadochokinetic task. Transcription-based and acoustic measures of token-to-token variability were derived. Articulation accuracy and general indices of language skills were measured as well. Results: Low correlations were observed between transcription-based and acoustic measures of phonetic variability, and among the acoustic measures themselves. Children who were the most variable on one measure were not necessarily highly variable on other measures. Transcription-based measures of variability were associated with language skills. Conclusions: Measures of phonetic variability did not identify children in the sample as consistently high or low. Data do not support the notion that clear subgroups based on phonetic variability can be reliably identified in children with R-SSDs. The link between highly variable phonetic output (quantified by transcription-based measures) and lower language skills requires further exploration.
Publication
Topics in Language Disorders
Date
APR-JUN 2011
Volume
31
Issue
2
Pages
168-184
Journal Abbr
Top. Lang. Disord.
Citation Key
ISI:000290432200007
ISSN
0271-8294
Language
English
Extra
18 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31]
tex.orcid-numbers: Preston, Jonathan/0000-0001-9971-6321
tex.researcherid-numbers: Preston, Jonathan/E-9310-2010
tex.unique-id: ISI:000290432200007
Citation Key: ISI:000290432200007
Citation
Preston, J. L., & Koenig, L. L. (2011). Phonetic variability in residual speech sound disorders exploration of subtypes. Topics in Language Disorders, 31(2), 168–184. https://doi.org/10.1097/TLD.0b013e318217b875
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