10 results on '"Brigitte Charlier"'
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2. Développement langagier d’enfants porteurs d’implants cochléaires et normo-entendants : lien avec différents indices acoustiques de nasalité vocalique
- Author
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Sophie Fagniart, Brigitte Charlier, Véronique Delvaux, Bernard Harmegnies, Anne Huberlant, Myriam Piccaluga, and Kathy Huet
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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3. Speech-Language Pathologists' Support for Parents of Young d/Deaf Multilingual Learners
- Author
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Pauline van der Straten Waillet, Cécile Colin, Kathryn Crowe, and Brigitte Charlier
- Subjects
Parents ,Pathologists ,Speech and Hearing ,Persons With Hearing Impairments ,Speech-Language Pathology ,Communication Disorders ,Humans ,Speech ,Multilingualism ,Cultural Diversity ,Child ,Education - Abstract
Increasing cultural and linguistic diversity among children and families brings new challenges for early intervention professionals. The purpose of this study was to identify the specific roles and needs of speech-language pathologists (SLPs) who practice in early intervention settings with culturally and linguistically diverse families of d/Deaf multilingual learners (DMLs). Thirteen SLPs completed an online survey about their practices and needs. Interviews were conducted with five parents of DMLs. Results showed that SLPs have lower self-satisfaction with families of DMLs compared to mainstream families. Parents were highly satisfied with the support they received. Both groups of participants reported a need for specific tools or adaptations, especially if there was no shared language. Thematic analysis identified three themes: communication and partnership, professional resources for responding to diversity, and diversity of parental profiles. This article provides an insight into the perspectives of both professionals and culturally and linguistically diverse parents, and identifies specific aspects of early intervention services with parents of DMLs: developing partnership in the context of cultural and/or linguistic differences, discussing topics related to multilingualism, and providing highly adaptable family-centered services.
- Published
- 2022
4. Early experience of Cued Speech enhances speechreading performance in deaf
- Author
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Philippe Peigneux, Brigitte Charlier, Jacqueline Leybaert, Mario Aparicio, and Charlotte Neyrat
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Speechreading ,Cued speech ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Educational method ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Error analysis ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,General Medicine ,Audiology ,Psychology ,General Psychology - Abstract
It is known that deaf individuals usually outperform normal hearing subjects in speechreading; however, the underlying reasons remain unclear. In the present study, speechreading performance was assessed in normal hearing participants (NH), deaf participants who had been exposed to the Cued Speech (CS) system early and intensively, and deaf participants exposed to oral language without Cued Speech (NCS). Results show a gradation in performance with highest performance in CS, then in NCS, and finally NH participants. Moreover, error analysis suggests that speechreading processing is more accurate in the CS group than in the other groups. Given that early and intensive CS has been shown to promote development of accurate phonological processing, we propose that the higher speechreading results in Cued Speech users are linked to a better capacity in phonological decoding of visual articulators.
- Published
- 2011
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- View/download PDF
5. The Rhyming Skills of Deaf Children Educated with Phonetically Augmented Speechreading
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Jacqueline Leybaert and Brigitte Charlier
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Lipreading ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Deafness ,Audiology ,Sign language ,Language Development ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,050105 experimental psychology ,Sign Language ,Belgium ,Phonetics ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Early childhood ,Child ,Modality (semiotics) ,General Psychology ,media_common ,Cued speech ,Speechreading ,Rhyme ,05 social sciences ,Psychologie expérimentale ,Spelling ,Linguistics ,Psychologie ,Case-Control Studies ,Education of Hearing Disabled ,Female ,Psychology ,Psychologie cognitive ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Two experiments investigated whether profoundly deaf children's rhyming ability was determined by the linguistic input that they were exposed to in their early childhood. Children educated with Cued Speech (CS) were compared to other deaf children, educated orally or with sign language. In CS, speechreading is combined with manual cues that disambiguate it. The central hypothesis is that CS allows deaf children to develop accurate phonological representations, which, in turn, assist in the emergence of accurate rhyming abilities. Experiment 1 showed that the deaf children educated early with CS performed better at rhyme judgement than did other deaf children. The performance of early CS-users was not influenced by word spelling. Experiment 2 confirmed this result in a rhyme generation task. Taken together, results support the hypothesis that rhyming ability depends on early exposure to a linguistic input specifying all phonological contrasts, independently of the modality (visual or auditory) in which this input is perceived., SCOPUS: ar.j, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
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6. The Role of Lip-reading and Cued Speech in the Processing of Phonological Information in French-educated Deaf Children
- Author
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Jesus Alegria, Brigitte Charlier, and Sven L. Mattys
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Cued speech ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Improved performance ,Reading (process) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Perception ,medicine ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Audiology ,Syllable ,Psychology ,Linguistics ,media_common - Abstract
Deaf children exposed to Cued Speech (CS: system designed to reduce lip-reading ambiguity) either before age 2 (“early”) or later at school (“late”) were presented with words and pseudowords with or without CS. The first goal was to examine the effects of adding CS to lip-reading on phonological perception. Results showed that CS substantially improved performance suggesting that CS corrects for lip-reading ambiguities. CS effects were significantly larger in the “early” than the “late” group, particularly with pseudowords. The second goal was to establish the way in which lip-reading and CS combine to produce unitary percepts. To address this issue, two types of phonological misperception resulting from CS's structural characteristics were analysed; substitutions based on the similarity between CS units, and intrusions of a third syllable for bisyllabic pseudowords requiring three CS units. The results showed that the frequency of such misperceptions increased with CS. The integration of CS and lip-read ...
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- 1999
- Full Text
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7. Early experience of Cued Speech enhances speechreading performance in deaf
- Author
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Mario, Aparicio, Philippe, Peigneux, Brigitte, Charlier, Charlotte, Neyrat, and Jacqueline, Leybaert
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Adult ,Persons With Hearing Impairments ,Adolescent ,Case-Control Studies ,Lipreading ,Early Intervention, Educational ,Humans ,Learning ,Speech ,Cues ,Deafness ,Middle Aged - Abstract
It is known that deaf individuals usually outperform normal hearing subjects in speechreading; however, the underlying reasons remain unclear. In the present study, speechreading performance was assessed in normal hearing participants (NH), deaf participants who had been exposed to the Cued Speech (CS) system early and intensively, and deaf participants exposed to oral language without Cued Speech (NCS). Results show a gradation in performance with highest performance in CS, then in NCS, and finally NH participants. Moreover, error analysis suggests that speechreading processing is more accurate in the CS group than in the other groups. Given that early and intensive CS has been shown to promote development of accurate phonological processing, we propose that the higher speechreading results in Cued Speech users are linked to a better capacity in phonological decoding of visual articulators.
- Published
- 2011
8. Compétences cognitives, linguistiques et sociales de l'enfant sourd
- Author
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Jacqueline Leybaert, Catherine Hage, and Brigitte Charlier
- Abstract
La deficience auditive est un handicap invisible, mais lourd de consequences pour les enfants concernes. Leur developpement cognitif, linguistique, scolaire et social est toujours affecte a des degres divers. La perte auditive ne determine pas a elle seule l’importance des deficits qui peuvent s’installer : des facteurs tels que l’etiologie, l’âge du diagnostic, l’implication parentale, la qualite et la nature de l’environnement linguistique sont susceptibles d’influencer l’evolution de l’enfant vers la maitrise d’une premiere langue, que cette langue soit parlee ou signee. Car c’est bien l’acquisition d’une langue qui constitue un des enjeux fondamentaux de l’education d’un enfant sourd. Le present ouvrage est le premier a poser les jalons d’une evaluation multidisciplinaire, sur la base des pratiques educatives et des modeles de developpement de l’enfant entendant les plus actuels. A tous les educateurs et les professionnels soucieux d’adopter des pratiques a la fois rigoureuses, realistes et ajustees a l’enfant et a sa famille, l’ouvrage offre une mise a jour des connaissances recentes, un cadre theorique rigoureux, des concepts porteurs, des pistes d’evaluation concretes et une ouverture aux champs d’investigation du futur. Cet ouvrage collectif se veut enfin le reflet du dialogue entre les chercheurs et les cliniciens, qui est sans doute la meilleure facon de contribuer au developpement toujours plus harmonieux des enfants sourds et malentendants.
- Published
- 2006
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9. Visual speech in the head: the effect of cued-speech on rhyming, remembering, and spelling
- Author
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Jacqueline Leybaert and Brigitte Charlier
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Cued speech ,Speech and Hearing ,Head (linguistics) ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Psychology ,Modality (semiotics) ,Spelling ,Education ,Cognitive psychology ,Spoken language - Abstract
Deaf children rely mainly on lipreading to understand spoken language. The phonological representations they develop from the lipread signal are underspecified, leading to poor performances in all mental activities relying on such representations. To overcome these difficulties, systems have been designed that deliver entirely visually specified information about the phonological contrasts of spoken language. The paper explores the consequences of exposure to one of such systems, namely cued-speech (CS) on the development of phonological representations. Deaf children exposed early to CS at home show a reliance on inner speech for rhyming, remembering, and spelling similar to that displayed by hearing children but different from that of deaf children not exposed early to CS. We argue that the degree of specificity of phonological information delivered to the deaf children is more important than the modality though which they perceive speech for the development of phonological abilities.
- Published
- 1996
10. Effect of Anticonvulsant Drugs on 7-Hydroxybutyrate Release from Hippocampal Slices: Inhibition by Valproate and Ethosuximide
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Philippe Vayer, Paul Mandel, Brigitte Charlier, and Michel Maitre
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Pentobarbital ,Chemistry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hippocampus ,Trimethadione ,Pharmacology ,Hippocampal formation ,Biochemistry ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Anticonvulsant ,Ethosuximide ,medicine ,Liberation ,Neurotransmitter ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The effects of some anticonvulsant drugs have been investigated on gamma-hydroxybutyrate release from rat hippocampal and striatal slices. Sodium valproate and ethosuximide inhibited the depolarization-evoked release of gamma-hydroxybutyrate induced by 40 mM K+. The IC50 values for these two drugs are in the concentration range of valproate and ethosuximide that exists in rat brain after administration of anticonvulsant doses to the animals. Trimethadione and pentobarbital are without significant effects. It can be concluded that the inhibition of gamma-hydroxybutyrate release, particularly that observed for hippocampus, might explain the protective effect of valproate and ethosuximide on gamma-hydroxybutyrate-induced seizures and perhaps on other kinds of epileptoid phenomenon.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
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