277 results on '"Edwards, Jan"'
Search Results
2. The everyday speech environments of preschoolers with and without cochlear implants.
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Cychosz, Margaret, Edwards, Jan R, Munson, Benjamin, Romeo, Rachel, Kosie, Jessica, and Newman, Rochelle S
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Linguistics ,Allied Health and Rehabilitation Science ,Cognitive and Computational Psychology ,Health Sciences ,Language ,Communication and Culture ,Psychology ,Rehabilitation ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Bioengineering ,Pediatric ,Prevention ,Assistive Technology ,Ear ,cochlear implant ,deafness ,language input ,spoken language ,language interaction ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Speech-Language Pathology & Audiology ,Health sciences ,Language ,communication and culture - Abstract
Children who receive cochlear implants develop spoken language on a protracted timescale. The home environment facilitates speech-language development, yet it is relatively unknown how the environment differs between children with cochlear implants and typical hearing. We matched eighteen preschoolers with implants (31-65 months) to two groups of children with typical hearing: by chronological age and hearing age. Each child completed a long-form, naturalistic audio recording of their home environment (appx. 16 hours/child; >730 hours of observation) to measure adult speech input, child vocal productivity, and caregiver-child interaction. Results showed that children with cochlear implants and typical hearing were exposed to and engaged in similar amounts of spoken language with caregivers. However, the home environment did not reflect developmental stages as closely for children with implants, or predict their speech outcomes as strongly. Home-based speech-language interventions should focus on the unique input-outcome relationships for this group of children with hearing loss.
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- 2024
3. When Children's Production Deviates from Observed Input: Modeling the Variable Production of the English Past Tense
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Barak, Libby, Harmon, Zara, Feldman, Naomi H., Edwards, Jan, and Shafto, Patrick
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As children gradually master grammatical rules, they often go through a period of producing form-meaning associations that were not observed in the input. For example, 2- to 3-year-old English-learning children use the bare form of verbs in settings that require obligatory past tense meaning while already starting to produce the grammatical -"ed" inflection. While many studies have focused on overgeneralization errors, fewer studies have attempted to explain the root of this earlier stage of rule acquisition. In this work, we use computational modeling to replicate children's production behavior prior to the generalization of past tense production in English. We illustrate how seemingly erroneous productions emerge in a model, without being licensed in the grammar and despite the model aiming at conforming to grammatical forms. Our results show that bare form productions stem from a tension between two factors: (1) trying to produce a less frequent meaning (the past tense) and (2) being unable to restrict the production of frequent forms (the bare form) as learning progresses. Like children, our model goes through a stage of bare form production and then converges on adult-like production of the regular past tense, showing that these different stages can be accounted for through a single learning mechanism.
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- 2023
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4. Children with Cochlear Implants Use Semantic Prediction to Facilitate Spoken Word Recognition
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Blomquist, Christina, Newman, Rochelle S., Huang, Yi Ting, and Edwards, Jan
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Purpose: Children with cochlear implants (CIs) are more likely to struggle with spoken language than their age-matched peers with normal hearing (NH), and new language processing literature suggests that these challenges may be linked to delays in spoken word recognition. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether children with CIs use language knowledge via semantic prediction to facilitate recognition of upcoming words and help compensate for uncertainties in the acoustic signal. Method: Five- to 10-year-old children with CIs heard sentences with an informative verb (draws) or a neutral verb (gets) preceding a target word (picture). The target referent was presented on a screen, along with a phonologically similar competitor (pickle). Children's eye gaze was recorded to quantify efficiency of access of the target word and suppression of phonological competition. Performance was compared to both an age-matched group and vocabulary-matched group of children with NH. Results: Children with CIs, like their peers with NH, demonstrated use of informative verbs to look more quickly to the target word and look less to the phonological competitor. However, children with CIs demonstrated less efficient use of semantic cues relative to their peers with NH, even when matched for vocabulary ability. Conclusions: Children with CIs use semantic prediction to facilitate spoken word recognition but do so to a lesser extent than children with NH. Children with CIs experience challenges in predictive spoken language processing above and beyond limitations from delayed vocabulary development. Children with CIs with better vocabulary ability demonstrate more efficient use of lexical-semantic cues. Clinical interventions focusing on building knowledge of words and their associations may support efficiency of spoken language processing for children with CIs.
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- 2021
5. The Competition-Compensation Account of Developmental Language Disorder
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Harmon, Zara, Barak, Libby, Shafto, Patrick, Edwards, Jan, and Feldman, Naomi H.
- Abstract
Children with developmental language disorder (DLD) regularly use the bare form of verbs (e.g., dance) instead of inflected forms (e.g., danced). We propose an account of this behavior in which processing difficulties of children with DLD disproportionally affect processing novel inflected verbs in their input. Limited experience with inflection in novel contexts leads the inflection to face stronger competition from alternatives. Competition is resolved through a compensatory behavior that involves producing a more accessible alternative: in English, the bare form. We formalize this hypothesis within a probabilistic model that trades off context-dependent versus independent processing. Results show an over-reliance on preceding stem contexts when retrieving the inflection in a model that has difficulty with processing novel inflected forms. We further show that following the introduction of a bias to store and retrieve forms with preceding contexts, generalization in the typically developing (TD) models remains more or less stable, while the same bias in the DLD models exaggerates difficulties with generalization. Together, the results suggest that inconsistent use of inflectional morphemes by children with DLD could stem from inferences they make on the basis of data containing fewer novel inflected forms. Our account extends these findings to suggest that problems with detecting a form in novel contexts combined with a bias to rely on familiar contexts when retrieving a form could explain sequential planning difficulties in children with DLD.
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- 2023
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6. African American English and Early Literacy: A Comparison of Approaches to Quantifying Nonmainstream Dialect Use
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Maher, Zachary K., Erskine, Michelle E., Byrd, Arynn S., Harring, Jeffrey R., and Edwards, Jan R.
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Purpose: Many studies have found a correlation between overall usage rates of nonmainstream forms and reading scores, but less is known about which dialect differences are most predictive. Here, we consider different methods of characterizing African American English use from existing assessments and examine which methods best predict literacy achievement. Method: Kindergarten and first-grade students who speak African American English received two assessments of dialect use and two assessments of decoding at the beginning and end of the school year. Item-level analyses of the dialect-use assessments were used to compute measures of dialect usage: (a) an overall feature rate measure based on the Diagnostic Evaluation of Language Variation-Screening Test, (b) a subscore analysis of the Diagnostic Evaluation of Language Variation-Screening Test based on items that pattern together, (c) an alternative assessment where children repeat and translate sentences, and (d) "repertoire" measures based on a categorical distinction of whether a child used a particular feature of mainstream American English. Results: Models using feature rate measures provided better data--model fit than those with repertoire measures, and baseline performance on a sentence repetition task was a positive predictor of reading score at the end of the school year. For phonological subscores, change from the beginning to end of the school year predicted reading at the end of the school year, whereas baseline scores were most predictive for grammatical subscores. Conclusions: The addition of a sentence imitation task is useful for understanding a child's dialect and anticipating potential areas for support in early literacy. We observed some support for the idea that morphological dialect differences (i.e., irregular verb morphology) have a particularly close tie to later literacy, but future work will be necessary to confirm this finding.
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- 2021
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7. The Relationship between Speech Perception, Speech Production, and Vocabulary Abilities in Children: Insights from By-Group and Continuous Analyses
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Hearnshaw, Stephanie, Baker, Elise, Pomper, Ron, McGregor, Karla K., Edwards, Jan, and Munro, Natalie
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Purpose: The purpose of this study was to explore the relationship between speech perception, speech production, and vocabulary abilities in children with and without speech sound disorders (SSDs), analyzing the data both by group and continuously. Method: Sixty-one Australian English--speaking children aged 48-69 months participated in this study. Children's speech production abilities ranged along the continuum from SSDs through to typical speech. Their vocabulary abilities ranged along the continuum from typical to above average ("lexically precocious"). Children completed routine speech and language assessments in addition to an experimental Australian English lexical and phonetic judgment task. Results: When analyzing data by group, there was no significant difference between the speech perception ability of children with SSDs and that of children without SSDs. Children with above-average vocabularies had significantly better speech perception ability than children with average vocabularies. When analyzing data continuously, speech production and vocabulary were both significant positive predictors of variance in speech perception ability, both individually in simple linear regression and when combined in multiple linear regression. There was also a significant positive correlation between perception and production of two of the four target phonemes tested (i.e., /k/ and [Purpose: The purpose of this study was to explore the relationship between speech perception, speech production, and vocabulary abilities in children with and without speech sound disorders (SSDs), analyzing the data both by group and continuously. Method: Sixty-one Australian English--speaking children aged 48--69 months participated in this study. Children's speech production abilities ranged along the continuum from SSDs through to typical speech. Their vocabulary abilities ranged along the continuum from typical to above average ("lexically precocious"). Children completed routine speech and language assessments in addition to an experimental Australian English lexical and phonetic judgment task. Results: When analyzing data by group, there was no significant difference between the speech perception ability of children with SSDs and that of children without SSDs. Children with above-average vocabularies had significantly better speech perception ability than children with average vocabularies. When analyzing data continuously, speech production and vocabulary were both significant positive predictors of variance in speech perception ability, both individually in simple linear regression and when combined in multiple linear regression. There was also a significant positive correlation between perception and production of two of the four target phonemes tested (i.e., /k/ and [voiceless postalveolar fricative]) among children in the SSD group. Conclusions: Results from this study provide further insight into the complex relationship between speech perception, speech production, and vocabulary abilities in children. While there is a clinical and important need for categorical distinctions between SSDs and typically developing speech, findings further highlight the value of investigating speech production and vocabulary abilities continuously and categorically. By capturing the heterogeneity among children's speech production and vocabulary abilities, we can advance our understanding of SSDs in children. ) among children in the SSD group. Conclusions: Results from this study provide further insight into the complex relationship between speech perception, speech production, and vocabulary abilities in children. While there is a clinical and important need for categorical distinctions between SSDs and typically developing speech, findings further highlight the value of investigating speech production and vocabulary abilities continuously and categorically. By capturing the heterogeneity among children's speech production and vocabulary abilities, we can advance our understanding of SSDs in children.
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- 2023
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8. Preschoolers Rely on Rich Speech Representations to Process Variable Speech
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Cychosz, Margaret, Mahr, Tristan, Munson, Benjamin, Newman, Rochelle, and Edwards, Jan R.
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To learn language, children must map variable input to categories such as phones and words. How do children process variation and distinguish between variable pronunciations ("shoup" for "soup") versus new words? The unique sensory experience of children with cochlear implants, who learn speech through their device's degraded signal, lends new insight into this question. In a mispronunciation sensitivity eyetracking task, children with implants (N = 33), and typical hearing (N = 24; 36-66 months; 36F, 19M; all non-Hispanic white), with larger vocabularies processed known words faster. But children with implants were less sensitive to mispronunciations than typical hearing controls. Thus, children of all hearing experiences use lexical knowledge to process familiar words but require detailed speech representations to process variable speech in real time.
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- 2023
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9. Use of Mutual Exclusivity and Its Relationship to Language Ability in Toddlers with Autism Spectrum Disorder
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Mathée-Scott, Janine, Larson, Caroline, Venker, Courtney, Pomper, Ron, Edwards, Jan, Saffran, Jenny, and Ellis Weismer, Susan
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To efficiently learn new words, children use constraints such as mutual exclusivity (ME) to narrow the search for potential referents. The current study investigated the use of ME in toddlers with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and neurotypical (NT) peers matched on nonverbal cognition. Thirty-two toddlers with ASD and 26 NT toddlers participated in a looking-while-listening task. Images of novel and familiar objects were presented along with a novel or familiar label. Overall, toddlers with ASD showed less efficient looking toward a novel referent when a novel label was presented compared to NT toddlers, controlling for age and familiar word knowledge. However, toddlers with ASD and higher language ability demonstrated more robust use of ME than those with lower language ability.
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- 2022
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10. Making Heads or Tails of it: A Competition–Compensation Account of Morphological Deficits in Language Impairment
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Harmon, Zara, Barak, Libby, Shafto, Patrick, Edwards, Jan, and Feldman, Naomi H
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cognitive science - Abstract
Children with developmental language disorder (DLD) regularly use the base form of verbs (e.g., dance) instead of inflected forms (e.g., danced). We propose an account of this behavior in which children with DLD have difficulty processing novel inflected verbs in their input. This leads the inflected form to face stronger competition from alternatives. Competition is resolved by the production of a more accessible alternative with high semantic overlap with the inflected form: in English, the bare form. We test our account computationally by training a nonparametric Bayesian model that infers the productivity of the inflectional suffix (-ed). We systematically vary the number of novel types of inflected verbs in the input to simulate the input as processed by children with and without DLD. Modeling results are consistent with our hypothesis, suggesting that children’s inconsistent use of inflectional morphemes could stem from inferences they make on the basis of impoverished data.
- Published
- 2021
11. Does Early Phonetic Differentiation Predict Later Phonetic Development? Evidence from a Longitudinal Study of /[voiced alveolar approximant]/ Development in Preschool Children
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Munson, Benjamin, Logerquist, Mara K., Kim, Hyuna, Martell, Alisha, and Edwards, Jan
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Purpose: We evaluated whether children whose inaccurate /[voiced alveolar approximant]/ productions showed evidence phonetic differentiation with /w/ at 3.5-4.5 years of age improved in /[voiced alveolar approximant]/ production over the next year more than children whose inaccurate productions did not show evidence of such differentiation. We also examined whether speech perception, inhibitory control, and vocabulary size predicted growth in /[voiced alveolar approximant]/. Method: A set of typically developing, monolingual English-speaking preschool children (n = 136) produced tokens of /[voiced alveolar approximant]/- and /w/-initial words at two time points (TPs), at which they were 39-52 and 51-65 months old. Children's productions of /[voiced alveolar approximant]/ and /w/ were narrowly phonetically transcribed. Children's productions at the earlier time point were rated by naïve listeners using a visual analog scale measure of phoneme goodness; these ratings were used to assess the degree of phonetic differentiation between /[voiced alveolar approximant]/ and /w/. Results: Accuracy for both phonemes varied considerably at both TPs. The growth in accuracy of /[voiced alveolar approximant]/ between the two TPs was not predicted by any individual-differences measures, nor by the degree of differentiation between /[voiced alveolar approximant]/ and /w/at the earlier time point. Conclusion: Low vocabulary size, low inhibitory control, poor speech perception, and the absence of early phonetic differentiation are not necessarily limiting factors in predicting /[voiced alveolar approximant]/ growth in individual children in the age range we studied.
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- 2021
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12. Spectral and temporal measures of coarticulation in child speech.
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Cychosz, Margaret, Edwards, Jan, Munson, Benjamin, and Johnson, Keith
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Child ,Preschool ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Phonetics ,Speech ,Speech Acoustics ,Speech Production Measurement ,Time Factors - Abstract
Speech produced by children is characterized by a high fundamental frequency which complicates measurement of vocal tract resonances, and hence coarticulation. Here two whole-spectrum measures of coarticulation are validated, one temporal and one spectral, that are less sensitive to these challenges. Using these measures, consonant-vowel coarticulation is calculated in the speech of a large sample of 4-year-old children. The measurements replicate known lingual coarticulatory findings from the literature, demonstrating the utility of these acoustic measures of coarticulation in speakers of all ages.
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- 2019
13. Bursty, Irregular Speech Input to Children Predicts Vocabulary Size.
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Cychosz, Margaret, Romeo, Rachel R., Edwards, Jan R., and Newman, Rochelle S.
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LANGUAGE acquisition ,CHILDREN'S language ,SPEECH ,INSTITUTIONAL care of children ,DEVELOPMENTAL psychology - Abstract
Children learn language by listening to speech from caregivers around them. However, the type and quantity of speech input that children are exposed to change throughout early childhood in ways that are poorly understood due to the small samples (few participants, limited hours of observation) typically available in developmental psychology. Here we used child‐centered audio recorders to unobtrusively measure speech input in the home to 292 children (aged 2–7 years), acquiring English in the United States, over 555 distinct days (approximately 8600 total hours of observation, or 29.62 h/child). These large timescales allowed us to compare how different dimensions of child‐directed speech input (quantity, burstiness) varied throughout early childhood. We then evaluated the relationship between each dimension of input and children's concurrent receptive vocabulary size. We found that the burstiness of speech input (spikes of words) was a stronger correlate with age than the quantity of speech input. Input burstiness was also a stronger predictor than input quantity for children's vocabulary size: children who heard spiky, more intense bouts of input had larger vocabularies. Overall, these results reaffirm the importance of speech input in the home for children's language development and support exposure–consolidation models of early language development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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14. Practice and Experience Predict Coarticulation in Child Speech
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Cychosz, Margaret, Munson, Benjamin, and Edwards, Jan R.
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Much research in child speech development suggests that young children coarticulate more than adults. There are multiple, not mutually-exclusive, explanations for this pattern. For example, children may coarticulate more because they are limited by immature motor control. Or they may coarticulate more if they initially represent phonological segments in larger, more holistic units such as syllables or feet. We tested the importance of several different explanations for coarticulation in child speech by evaluating how four-year-olds' language experience, speech practice, and speech planning predicted their coarticulation between adjacent segments in real words and paired nonwords. Children with larger vocabularies coarticulated less, especially in real words, though there were no reliable coarticulatory differences between real words and nonwords after controlling for word duration. Children who vocalized more throughout a daylong audio recording also coarticulated less. Quantity of child vocalizations was more predictive of the degree of children's coarticulation than a measure of receptive language experience, adult word count. Overall, these results suggest strong roles for children's phonological representations and speech practice, as well as their immature fine motor control, for coarticulatory development.
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- 2021
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15. Coarticulation facilitates lexical processing for toddlers with autism
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Pomper, Ron, Ellis Weismer, Susan, Saffran, Jenny, and Edwards, Jan
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- 2021
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16. Specificity of Phonological Representations for Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
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Pomper, Ron, Ellis Weismer, Susan, Saffran, Jenny, and Edwards, Jan
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This study investigated whether children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are sensitive to mispronunciations of familiar words and compared their sensitivity to children with typical-development. Sixty-four toddlers with ASD and 31 younger, typical controls participated in a looking-while-listening task that measured their accuracy in fixating the correct object when it was labelled with a correct pronunciation versus mispronunciation. A cognitive style that prioritizes processing local, rather than global features, as claimed by the weak central coherence theory, predicts that children with ASD should be more sensitive to mispronunciations than typical controls. The results, however, reveal no differences in the effect of mispronunciations on lexical processing between groups, even when matched for receptive language or non-verbal cognitive skills.
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- 2019
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17. Thinking Ahead: Incremental Language Processing Is Associated with Receptive Language Abilities in Preschoolers with Autism Spectrum Disorder
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Venker, Courtney E., Edwards, Jan, Saffran, Jenny R., and Ellis Weismer, Susan
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In typical development, listeners can use semantic content of verbs to facilitate incremental language processing--a skill that is associated with existing language skills. Studies of children with ASD have not identified an association between incremental language processing in semantically-constraining contexts and language skills, perhaps because participants were adolescents and/or children with strong language skills. This study examined incremental language processing and receptive language in young children with ASD with a range of language skills. Children showed a head start when presented with semantically-constraining verbs (e.g., "Read the book") compared to neutral verbs (e.g., "Find the book"). Children with weaker receptive language showed a smaller head start than children with stronger receptive language skills, suggesting continuity between typical development and ASD.
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- 2019
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18. Four Cases of Children With Phonological Impairment and Precocious Vocabulary: Making Sense of a Clinical Conundrum.
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Hearnshaw, Stephanie, Baker, Elise, Pomper, Ron, McGregor, Karla K., Edwards, Jan, and Munroa, Natalie
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ARTICULATION disorders ,SPEECH evaluation ,SPEECH perception ,VOCABULARY ,SPEECH disorders ,LANGUAGE acquisition ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to describe the speech production, speech perception, vocabulary, and word learning abilities of lexically precocious 4-year-old children with phonological impairment, in an effort to better understand the underlying nature of phonological impairment in children. Method: Using a case series approach, we identified four children with phonological impairment and precocious vocabulary abilities. Each child completed routine speech production and vocabulary assessments, as well as experimental speech perception and word learning tasks. The results from these tasks were then used to create profiles of each child's individual strengths and needs across the abilities assessed. Results: Although all four children presented with phonological impairment and lexically precocious receptive and expressive vocabulary, they differed in their specific speech errors. One child presented with phonological speech errors only, while the other three children presented with an interdental lisp alongside their phonological errors. Three children presented with average speech perception abilities, and one child presented with poorer speech perception. The same three children also showed some learning of novel nonwords 1 week post-initial exposure, while the other child showed no evidence of word learning 1 week post-initial exposure. Conclusions: The clinical profiles of lexically precocious children with phonological impairment offered different insights into the nature of the problem. Although one child appeared to present with underspecified underlying representations of words, the other three children appeared to present with wellspecified underlying representations. Of the three children with well-specified underlying representations, two appeared to have difficulty abstracting particular rules of the ambient phonological system. Further research is needed to improve our understanding of the underlying nature of phonological impairment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. The everyday speech environments of preschoolers with and without cochlear implants
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CYCHOSZ, Margaret, primary, EDWARDS, Jan R., additional, MUNSON, Benjamin, additional, ROMEO, Rachel, additional, KOSIE, Jessica, additional, and NEWMAN, Rochelle S., additional
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- 2024
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20. Bursty, irregular speech input to preschoolers predicts vocabulary size
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Cychosz, Meg, primary, Romeo, Rachel R, additional, edwards, jan, additional, and Newman, Rochelle Suzanne, additional
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- 2024
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21. Using Language Input and Lexical Processing to Predict Vocabulary Size
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Mahr, Tristan and Edwards, Jan
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Children learn words by listening to caregivers, and the quantity and quality of early language input predict later language development. Recent research suggests that word recognition efficiency may influence the relationship between input and vocabulary growth. We asked whether language input and lexical processing at 28-39 months predicted vocabulary size one year later in 109 preschoolers. Input was measured using adult word counts from LENA recordings. We used the visual world paradigm and measured lexical processing as the rate of change in proportion of looks to target. Regression analysis showed that lexical processing did not constrain the effect of input on vocabulary size. We also found that input and processing were more reliable predictors of receptive than expressive vocabulary growth.
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- 2018
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22. Does Speaker Race Affect the Assessment of Children's Speech Accuracy? A Comparison of Speech-Language Pathologists and Clinically Untrained Listeners
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Evans, Karen E., Munson, Benjamin, and Edwards, Jan
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Purpose: Some pronunciation patterns that are normal in 1 dialect might represent an error in another dialect (i.e., [ko(upsilon)l] for "cold," which is typical in African American English [AAE] but an error in many other dialects of English). This study examined whether trained speech-language pathologists and untrained listeners accommodate for presumed speaker dialect when rating children's productions of words. This study also explored whether effects of presumed race on perceived speech accuracy are mediated by individuals' knowledge and beliefs about AAE and their implicit attitudes about race. Method: Multiple groups of listeners rated the accuracy of a set of children's productions of words that have a distinct pronunciation in AAE. These were presented in 1 of 3 conditions: paired with no visual stimulus (to assess baseline accuracy) or paired with either African American children's faces (to suggest that the speaker uses AAE) or European American children's faces (to suggest that the speaker does not use AAE). Listeners also completed a set of measures of knowledge and attitudes about AAE and race, taken from previous studies. Results: Individuals in both groups rated children's productions more accurately when they were presented with African American children's faces than when paired with European American faces. The magnitude of this effect was generally similar across the 2 groups and was generally strongest for words that had been judged in the baseline condition to contain an error. None of the individual-differences measures predicted ratings. Conclusions: Assumptions about speaker attributes affect individuals' assessment of children's production accuracy. These effects are robust across trained and untrained listeners and cannot be predicted by existing measures of knowledge and attitudes about AAE and race.
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- 2018
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23. Multiple Approaches to "Appropriateness": A Mixed‐Methods Study of Elementary Teachers' Dispositions Toward African American Language as They Teach a Dialect‐Shifting Curriculum.
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Maher, Zachary, Mazzei, Carolyn, Shockley, Ebony Terrell, Thonesavanh, Tatiana, and Edwards, Jan
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AFRICAN American languages ,SOCIOLINGUISTICS ,SOCIAL stigma ,CURRICULUM planning ,INCLUSIVE education - Abstract
Despite decades of sociolinguistic research, African American Language (AAL) remains stigmatized throughout the United States education system. There have been proposals to counteract this through curricula and/or ideological interventions targeted at teachers that seek to validate AAL while maintaining Dominant American English (DAE) as an educational target. However, such approaches have been criticized for giving limited attention to combating the racism that underlies much linguistic marginalization. We used a mixed‐methods approach to explore the benefits and limitations of a dialect‐shifting curriculum in shaping teachers' language ideologies. Participants (n = 40) were K‐1 teachers in a predominantly Black mid‐Atlantic city. They were participating in an efficacy study of a dialect‐shifting curriculum; schools were randomly assigned to teach the curriculum (intervention condition) or continue with business as usual. Before and after the intervention, teachers completed a survey of their language attitudes, and a subset (n = 16) participated in semi‐structured interviews. On the survey, teachers displayed more favorable attitudes toward language variation at the end of the school year, regardless of condition. The interviews revealed a range of perspectives, revealing a tension between a belief in the utility of DAE for their students and an understanding that many students will wish to use AAL in their communities. The curriculum provided shared vocabulary to discuss this tension and increased some teachers' acceptance of AAL in non‐academic settings, but many did not view dialect variation as relevant to their priorities as K‐1 teachers. These findings clarify the trade‐offs involved in work toward a more (linguistically) inclusive education system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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24. I remembered the chorm! Word learning abilities of children with and without phonological impairment.
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Hearnshaw, Stephanie, Baker, Elise, Pomper, Ron, McGregor, Karla K., Edwards, Jan, and Munro, Natalie
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ARTICULATION disorders ,LANGUAGE & languages ,SOCIAL media ,AUDIOVISUAL materials ,PARENTS ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,RESEARCH funding ,T-test (Statistics) ,TASK performance ,COMPUTER software ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,PHONOLOGICAL awareness ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,STATISTICAL sampling ,RESEARCH evaluation ,LEARNING ,MANN Whitney U Test ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SPEECH evaluation ,STORYTELLING ,STATISTICS ,VOCABULARY ,SPEECH perception ,PHONETICS ,CLINICS ,DATA analysis software ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,GROUP process ,SOCIAL classes ,INTER-observer reliability ,EVALUATION ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Background: Children with phonological impairment present with pattern‐based errors in their speech production. While some children have difficulties with speech perception and/or the establishment of robust underlying phonological representations, the nature of phonological impairment in children is still not well understood. Given that phonological and lexical development are closely linked, one way to better understand the nature of the problem in phonological impairment is to examine word learning abilities in children. Aims: To examine word learning and its relationship with speech perception, speech production and vocabulary knowledge in children aged 4–5 years. There were two variables of interest: speech production abilities ranging from phonological impairment to typical speech; and vocabulary abilities ranging from typical to above average ('lexically precocious'). Methods & Procedures: Participants were 49 Australian‐English‐speaking children aged 48–69 months. Children were each taught four novel non‐words (out of a selection of eight) through stories, and word learning was assessed at 1 week post‐initial exposure. Word learning was assessed using two measures: confrontation naming and story retell naming. Data were analysed by group using independent‐samples t‐tests and Mann–Whitney U‐tests, and continuously using multiple linear regression. Outcomes & Results: There was no significant difference in word learning ability of children with and without phonological impairment, but regardless of speech group, children with above average vocabulary had significantly better word learning abilities than children with average vocabulary. In multiple linear regression, vocabulary was the only significant predictor of variance in word learning ability. Conclusions & Implications: Children with phonological impairment can be lexically precocious and learn new words like their peers without phonological impairment. Contrary to expectations, vocabulary knowledge rather than expressive phonological ability explained variance in measures of word learning. These findings question an assumption that children with phonological impairment have underspecified phonological representations. They also highlight the heterogeneity among children with phonological impairment and the need to better understand the nature of their difficulty learning the phonological system of the ambient language. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on the subject: There is limited research examining the word learning abilities of children with phonological impairment. Most previous research focuses on word properties such as phonotactic probability and neighbourhood density. Within the existing literature there are different reports and conclusions regarding the word learning abilities of children with phonological impairment and whether their word learning differs from that of children with typically developing speech. What this study adds to existing knowledge: This study found that vocabulary was the strongest predictor of word learning across children with and without phonological impairment. There was no significant difference in word learning ability between children with and without phonological impairment. However, children with lexically precocious vocabulary abilities were significantly better at word learning than children with average vocabulary abilities. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: Findings from this study support the importance of assessing and considering measures of word learning—including vocabulary—when working with children with phonological impairment. This study indicates that it is possible to use stories coupled with measures of confrontation naming and story retell to gain deeper insight into children's word learning abilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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25. I remembered the chorm! Word learning abilities of children with and without phonological impairment
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Hearnshaw, Stephanie, primary, Baker, Elise, additional, Pomper, Ron, additional, McGregor, Karla K., additional, Edwards, Jan, additional, and Munro, Natalie, additional
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- 2023
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26. Filling in the Blank: The Development of a Writing Screener for Elementary School Students Who Speak African American English.
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Byrd, Arynn S., Oppenheimer, Kathleen, Silverman, Rebecca, and Edwards, Jan
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BLACK English ,READING ,STATISTICAL correlation ,TASK performance ,DIALECTS ,ELEMENTARY schools ,RESEARCH funding ,T-test (Statistics) ,PILOT projects ,PHONOLOGICAL awareness ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,AGE distribution ,MANN Whitney U Test ,SCHOOL children ,SPEECH evaluation ,STATISTICS ,RESEARCH ,COMPARATIVE studies ,ENGLISH language ,LITERACY ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,WRITTEN communication ,INTER-observer reliability ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,ORTHOGRAPHY & spelling ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Purpose: Clinicians are tasked with using culturally and linguistically appropriate tools to evaluate oral and written language development accurately. However, limited tools account for linguistic diversity in writing. This gap can lead to under-and overdiagnosis of students who speak nonmainstream dialects. This study addressed that gap by developing a writing task to identify nonmainstream dialect features in the writing of early elementary school students. We describe the development, feasibility, and results of pilot testing of the task. Method: One hundred fifty-one first and second graders participated in the study as part of a larger study of nonmainstream dialect use. Students completed standardized literacy and language assessments and the researcher-developed writing task. The writing task used a novel fill-in-the-blank format to identify morphological features that vary between Mainstream American English and nonmainstream varieties such as African American English. Results: Second-grade students performed better on the writing task than first graders, and writing performance was strongly related to standardized literacy scores. Literacy skills were the strongest predictor of Mainstream American English use in writing, but spoken dialect use also correlated with written dialect use. Conclusions: The writing task captured dialect use in early elementary school students' writing, and students' performance on standardized literacy measures predicted written dialect features. These results are a first step toward developing a standardized measure to help professionals appropriately diagnose written expression disorders within linguistically diverse students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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27. Lexical Processing in Toddlers with ASD: Does Weak Central Coherence Play a Role?
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Ellis Weismer, Susan, Haebig, Eileen, Edwards, Jan, Saffran, Jenny, and Venker, Courtney E.
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This study investigated whether vocabulary delays in toddlers with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) can be explained by a cognitive style that prioritizes processing of detailed, local features of input over global contextual integration--as claimed by the weak central coherence (WCC) theory. Thirty toddlers with ASD and 30 younger, cognition-matched typical controls participated in a looking-while-listening task that assessed whether perceptual or semantic similarities among named images disrupted word recognition relative to a neutral condition. Overlap of perceptual features invited local processing whereas semantic overlap invited global processing. With the possible exception of a subset of toddlers who had very low vocabulary skills, these results provide no evidence that WCC is characteristic of lexical processing in toddlers with ASD.
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- 2016
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28. Brief Report: Early Lexical Comprehension in Young Children with ASD: Comparing Eye-Gaze Methodology and Parent Report
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Venker, Courtney E., Haebig, Eileen, and Edwards, Jan
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Lexical comprehension is commonly measured by parent report, but it may be difficult for parents of children with ASD to accurately judge their child's comprehension. We compared parent report to an eye-gaze measure of lexical comprehension in which participants observed pairs of images on a screen, along with accompanying speech that named one of the two images. Twenty-two toddlers with ASD participated. Trials were included if the target word was reported as unknown. Children spent significantly more time looking at the target after it was named than before (d = 0.66). These results provide evidence that eye-gaze measures can reveal emerging lexical knowledge in young children with ASD that may otherwise be overlooked.
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- 2016
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29. A Prekindergarten Curriculum Supplement for Enhancing Mainstream American English Knowledge in Nonmainstream American English Speakers
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Edwards, Jan R. and Rosin, Peggy
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Purpose: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of a curriculum supplement designed to enhance awareness of Mainstream American English (MAE) in African American English- (AAE-) speaking prekindergarten children. Method: Children in 2 Head Start classrooms participated in the study. The experimental classroom received the Talking and Learning for Kindergarten program (Edwards, Rosin, Gross, & Chen, 2013), which used contrastive analysis to highlight morphological, phonological, and pragmatic differences between MAE and AAE. The control classroom received the Kindness Curriculum (Flook, Goldberg, Pinger, & Davidson, 2014), which was designed to promote mindfulness and emotional self-regulation. The amount of instruction was the same across the 2 programs. Both classrooms participated in pre- and posttest assessments. Results: Children in the experimental classroom, but not the control classroom, showed significant improvement in 3 norm-referenced measures of phonological awareness and in an experimental measure that evaluated comprehension of words that are ambiguous in AAE, but unambiguous in MAE, because of morphological and phonological differences between the 2 dialects. Conclusion: Although more research needs to be done on the efficacy of the Talking and Learning for Kindergarten program, these results suggest that it is possible to enhance AAE-speaking children's awareness of MAE prior to kindergarten entry.
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- 2016
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30. The impact of dialect differences on spoken language comprehension
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Byrd, Arynn S., primary, Huang, Yi Ting, additional, and Edwards, Jan, additional
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- 2023
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31. Individual differences in categorical perception of speech: Cue weighting and executive function
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Kong, Eun Jong and Edwards, Jan
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- 2016
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32. Assessing Fine-Grained Speech Discrimination in Young Children With Bilateral Cochlear Implants
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Peng, Zhao Ellen, Hess, Christi, Saffran, Jenny R., Edwards, Jan R., and Litovsky, Ruth Y.
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- 2019
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33. The impact of dialect differences on spoken language comprehension
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Byrd, Arynn S., Byrd, Arynn S., Huang, Yi Ting, Edwards, Jan, Byrd, Arynn S., Byrd, Arynn S., Huang, Yi Ting, and Edwards, Jan
- Abstract
Research has suggested that children who speak African American English (AAE) have difficulty using features produced in Mainstream American English (MAE) but not AAE, to comprehend sentences in MAE. However, past studies mainly examined dialect features, such as verbal -s, that are produced as final consonants with shorter durations when produced in conversation which impacts their phonetic saliency. Therefore, it is unclear if previous results are due to the phonetic saliency of the feature or how AAE speakers process MAE dialect features more generally. This study evaluated if there were group differences in how AAE- and MAE-speaking children used the auxiliary verbs was and were, a dialect feature with increased phonetic saliency but produced differently between the dialects, to interpret sentences in MAE. Participants aged 6, 5–10, and 0 years, who spoke MAE or AAE, completed the DELV-ST, a vocabulary measure (PVT), and a sentence comprehension task. In the sentence comprehension task, participants heard sentences in MAE that had either unambiguous or ambiguous subjects. Sentences with ambiguous subjects were used to evaluate group differences in sentence comprehension. AAE-speaking children were less likely than MAE-speaking children to use the auxiliary verbs was and were to interpret sentences in MAE. Furthermore, dialect density was predictive of Black participant’s sensitivity to the auxiliary verb. This finding is consistent with how the auxiliary verb is produced between the two dialects: was is used to mark both singular and plural subjects in AAE, while MAE uses was for singular and were for plural subjects. This study demonstrated that even when the dialect feature is more phonetically salient, differences between how verb morphology is produced in AAE and MAE impact how AAE-speaking children comprehend MAE sentences.
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- 2023
34. The development of spoken word recognition in informative and uninformative sentence contexts
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Blomquist, Christina M., primary, Newman, Rochelle S., additional, and Edwards, Jan, additional
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- 2023
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35. Effects of Vocabulary Size on Online Lexical Processing by Preschoolers
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Law, Franzo, II and Edwards, Jan R.
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This study was designed to investigate the relationship between vocabulary size and the speed and accuracy of lexical processing in preschoolers between the ages of 30 and 46 months using an automatic eye tracking task based on the looking-while-listening paradigm (Fernald, Zangl, Portillo, & Marchman, 2008) and mispronunciation paradigm (White & Morgan, 2008). Children's eye gaze patterns were tracked while they looked at two pictures (one familiar object, one unfamiliar object) on a computer screen and simultaneously heard one of three kinds of auditory stimuli: correct pronunciations of the familiar object's name, one-feature mispronunciations of the familiar object's name, or a nonword. The results showed that children with larger expressive vocabularies, relative to children with smaller expressive vocabularies, were more likely to look to a familiar object upon hearing a correct pronunciation and to an unfamiliar object upon hearing a novel word. Results also showed that children with larger expressive vocabularies were more sensitive to mispronunciations; they were more likely to look toward the unfamiliar object rather than the familiar object upon hearing a one-feature mispronunciation of a familiar object-name. These results suggest that children with smaller vocabularies, relative to their larger-vocabulary age peers, are at a disadvantage for learning new words, as well as for processing familiar words.
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- 2015
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36. Practical lessons from gender audit of an education sector plan in Lao PDR
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Edwards, Jan and Girgis, Mona
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- 2015
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37. The everyday speech environments of preschoolers with and without cochlear implants
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Cychosz, Meg, primary, edwards, jan, additional, Munson, Benjamin, additional, Romeo, Rachel R, additional, Kosie, Jessica Elizabeth, additional, and Newman, Rochelle, additional
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- 2023
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38. Knowledge of variation in subject-verb agreement in monodialectal speakers of Mainstream American English and bidialectal speakers of Mainstream American English and African American Language
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Maher, Zachary, Novick, Jared, and edwards, jan
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Psycholinguistics and Neurolinguistics ,FOS: Languages and literature ,Linguistics ,dialect ,Social and Behavioral Sciences ,african american language ,language variation ,Anthropological Linguistics and Sociolinguistics - Abstract
As individuals from different social groups come into contact, they must accommodate sociolinguistic differences in morphosyntax (e.g. He seem nice vs. He seems nice) in order to successfully represent and comprehend their interlocutor's speech. For example, speakers of Mainstream American English (MAE) and African American Language (AAL) can generally understand each other, but they speak differently in reliable ways. However, little is known about the mechanisms behind morphosyntactic accommodation. We hypothesize that listeners adjust their reliance on morphosyntactic cues based on their knowledge of their interlocutor's grammar. This knowledge varies in precision and accuracy based on an individual's linguistic experience. In a series of experiments, we will study participants' knowledge of both MAE and AAL, comparing monodialectal speakers of MAE to bidialectal speakers of AAL and MAE. To test listeners' implicit knowledge, we will use a sociolinguistic sentence repetition task. Listeners will transcribe sentences presented in both MAE and AAL (established through filler items associated with particular voices), where agreement morphology will be unclear in the auditory stimuli (e.g., The cat walk(s)so fast). We predict that listeners will be more likely to transcribe a nonmainstream form ("The cat walk so fast") when a sentence is presented in an AAL guise. To test listeners' explicit knowledge of variation in subject-verb agreement, we will play sample clips of MAE and AAL, then ask participants to rate how likely a speaker of each variety would be to say a given sentence.
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- 2022
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39. Perception and Production in Child Language Disorders
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Edwards, Jan, primary and Munson, Benjamin, additional
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- 2017
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40. The development of spoken word recognition in informative and uninformative sentence contexts.
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Blomquist, Christina, primary, Newman, Rochelle, additional, and edwards, jan, additional
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- 2022
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41. Evaluating the Sources and Functions of Gradiency in Phoneme Categorization: An Individual Differences Approach
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Kapnoula, Efthymia C., Winn, Matthew B., Kong, Eun Jong, Edwards, Jan, and McMurray, Bob
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- 2017
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42. Quantifying the robustness of the English sibilant fricative contrast in children
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Holliday, Jeffrey J., Reidy, Patrick F., Beckman, Mary E., and Edwards, Jan
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Childhood speech perception -- Research -- Analysis ,Phonology -- Analysis ,Regression analysis -- Usage ,Health - Abstract
Purpose: Four measures of children's developing robustness of phonological contrast were compared to see how they correlated with age, vocabulary size, and adult listeners' correctness ratings. Method: Word-initial sibilant fricative productions from eighty-one 2- to 5-year-old children and 20 adults were phonetically transcribed and acoustically analyzed. Four measures of robustness of contrast were calculated for each speaker on the basis of the centroid frequency measured from each fricative token. Productions that were transcribed as correct from different children were then used as stimuli in a perception experiment in which adult listeners rated the goodness of each production. Results: Results showed that the degree of category overlap, quantified as the percentage of a child's productions whose category could be correctly predicted from the output of a mixed-effects logistic regression model, was the measure that correlated best with listeners' goodness judgments. Conclusions: Even when children's productions have been transcribed as correct, adult listeners are sensitive to within-category variation quantified by the child's degree of category overlap. Further research is needed to explore the relationship between the age of a child and adults' sensitivity to different types of within-category variation in children's speech., Consonant acquisition in children can be characterized by a high degree of variability both across sounds (i.e., some consonants or features tend to be produced in an adultlike way much [...]
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- 2015
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43. Preschoolers rely on rich speech representations to process variable speech
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Cychosz, Meg, primary, Mahr, Tristan, additional, Munson, Benjamin, additional, Newman, Rochelle, additional, and edwards, jan, additional
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- 2022
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44. The competition–compensation account of developmental language disorder
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Harmon, Zara, Harmon, Zara, Barak, Libby, Shafto, Patrick, Edwards, Jan, Feldman, Naomi H., Harmon, Zara, Harmon, Zara, Barak, Libby, Shafto, Patrick, Edwards, Jan, and Feldman, Naomi H.
- Abstract
Children with developmental language disorder (DLD) regularly use the bare form of verbs (e.g., dance) instead of inflected forms (e.g., danced). We propose an account of this behavior in which processing difficulties of children with DLD disproportionally affect processing novel inflected verbs in their input. Limited experience with inflection in novel contexts leads the inflection to face stronger competition from alternatives. Competition is resolved through a compensatory behavior that involves producing a more accessible alternative: in English, the bare form. We formalize this hypothesis within a probabilistic model that trades off context-dependent versus independent processing. Results show an over-reliance on preceding stem contexts when retrieving the inflection in a model that has difficulty with processing novel inflected forms. We further show that following the introduction of a bias to store and retrieve forms with preceding contexts, generalization in the typically developing (TD) models remains more or less stable, while the same bias in the DLD models exaggerates difficulties with generalization. Together, the results suggest that inconsistent use of inflectional morphemes by children with DLD could stem from inferences they make on the basis of data containing fewer novel inflected forms. Our account extends these findings to suggest that problems with detecting a form in novel contexts combined with a bias to rely on familiar contexts when retrieving a form could explain sequential planning difficulties in children with DLD.
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- 2022
45. Predictive language processing in young autistic children
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Prescott, Kathryn E., primary, Mathée‐Scott, Janine, additional, Reuter, Tracy, additional, Edwards, Jan, additional, Saffran, Jenny, additional, and Ellis Weismer, Susan, additional
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- 2022
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46. The Acoustics of Word-Initial Fricatives and Their Effect on Word-Level Intelligibility in Children With Bilateral Cochlear Implants
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Reidy, Patrick F., Kristensen, Kayla, Winn, Matthew B., Litovsky, Ruth Y., and Edwards, Jan R.
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- 2017
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47. Use of Mutual Exclusivity and its Relationship to Language Ability in Toddlers with Autism Spectrum Disorder
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Mathée-Scott, Janine, primary, Larson, Caroline, additional, Venker, Courtney, additional, Pomper, Ron, additional, Edwards, Jan, additional, Saffran, Jenny, additional, and Ellis Weismer, Susan, additional
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- 2021
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48. Disentangling acoustic measures from lexical statistics in child-directed speech
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Cychosz, Margaret, primary, Edwards, Jan R., additional, Bernstein Ratner, Nan, additional, Torrington Eaton, Catherine, additional, and Newman, Rochelle S., additional
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- 2021
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49. Acoustic-Lexical Characteristics of Child-Directed Speech Between 7 and 24 Months and Their Impact on Toddlers' Phonological Processing
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Cychosz, Margaret, primary, Edwards, Jan R., additional, Bernstein Ratner, Nan, additional, Torrington Eaton, Catherine, additional, and Newman, Rochelle S., additional
- Published
- 2021
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50. Auditory feedback experience in the development of phonetic production: Evidence from preschoolers with cochlear implants and their normal-hearing peers
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Cychosz, Margaret, primary, Munson, Benjamin, additional, Newman, Rochelle S., additional, and Edwards, Jan R., additional
- Published
- 2021
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