Articulation or phonology? Evidence from longitudinal error data
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Reilly, Sheena
Eecen, Kyriaki Ttofari
Morgan, Angela T
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Abstract
Children’s speech difficulties can be motor (phone misarticulation) or linguistic (impaired knowledge of phonological contrasts and constraints). These two difficulties sometimes co-occur. This paper reports longitudinal data from the Early Language in Victoria Study (ELVS) at 4 and 7 years of age. Of 1494 participants, 93 made non-age appropriate speech errors on standardised assessments at 4 years, and were able to be reassessed at 7 years. At 4 years, 85% of these children only made phonological errors, 14% made both articulation and phonological errors and one child only made articulation errors (a lateral lisp). In total, 8 of 13 children making both articulation and phonological errors at 4 years had resolved by 7 years. Unexpectedly, eight children who had demonstrated articulation of fricatives at 4 years, acquired distorted production of ≥ 50% of occurrences of/s, z/ by 7 years. In total, then, 22 children (24% of children with speech difficulties) made articulatory errors at one or both assessments. Case data for all children are presented. Theoretical and clinical implications are considered.
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Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics
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32
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11
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© 2018 Taylor & Francis. This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics on 03 Jul 2018, available online: https://doi.org/10.1080/02699206.2018.1488994
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Clinical sciences
Cognitive and computational psychology
Linguistics