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2. Speech perception and auditory development in infants with and without hearing loss

  • Derek M. Houston and Andrea Warner-Czyz
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Handbook of Communication Disorders
This chapter is in the book Handbook of Communication Disorders
© 2018 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Munich/Boston

© 2018 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Munich/Boston

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Preface to the Handbooks of Applied Linguistics Series V
  3. Table of contents VII
  4. Introduction to the Handbook of Communication Disorders: Theoretical, Empirical, and Applied Linguistic Perspectives 1
  5. I Linguistic acquisition Section 1: Phonology and speech
  6. 1. The role of hearing in speech and language acquisition and processing 19
  7. 2. Speech perception and auditory development in infants with and without hearing loss 43
  8. 3 Developing phonology 63
  9. I Linguistic acquisition Section 2: Lexical knowledge
  10. 4 Early lexicon and the development that precedes and follows it – A developmental view to early lexicon 91
  11. 5 .Typical and atypical lexical development 101
  12. 6. Figurative language acquisition and development 117
  13. 7. Figurative language development: Implications for assessment and clinical practice 137
  14. 8 .Spoken word production: Processes and potential breakdown 155
  15. I Linguistic acquisition Section 3: Grammatical constructions
  16. 9. Morphological development 181
  17. 10. Acquisition of an agglutinative language under adverse neonatal conditions 203
  18. 11. Later morpho-lexical acquisition 219
  19. 12. Development of complex syntax: From early clause-combining to text-embedded syntactic packaging 235
  20. II Oral and written communication Section 4: Communication and discourse
  21. 13. Theory of mind and communication: Developmental perspectives 259
  22. 14. Socio-pragmatic skills underlying language development: Boundaries between typical and atypical development 279
  23. 15. Learning conversational skills and learning from conversation 311
  24. 16. Narrative Discourse: Developmental Perspectives 329
  25. 17. Narrative interventions for children with language disorders: A review of practices and findings 357
  26. 18. Helping language learning in inclusive classrooms 387
  27. II Oral and written communication Section 5: Linguistic literacy
  28. 19. What is literacy? And what is a literate disability? 405
  29. 20. Promoting early literacy of children from low socioeconomic backgrounds in preschool and at home 415
  30. 21. Foundations for a universal model of learning to read 437
  31. 22. Acquisition of spelling: Normal and impaired/disordered populations 461
  32. 23 .The role of morphology in reading and writing 477
  33. 24. Reading comprehension: Individual differences, disorders, and underlying cognitive processes 503
  34. 25. Grammar for writing and grammar in writing 525
  35. III Environmental effects Section 6: Socio-economic status
  36. 26. How socioeconomic differences in early language environments shape children’s language development 545
  37. 27. Cognition and language in different socioeconomic and environmental settings 565
  38. 28. Language disorder versus language difference: The impact of socio-economic status 585
  39. III Environmental effects Section 7: Multilingualism
  40. 29. Input, context and early child bilingualism: Implications for clinical practice 601
  41. 30. SLI in bilingual development: How do we approach assessment? 617
  42. 31. Development of vocabulary knowledge and its relationship with reading comprehension among emergent bilingual children: An overview 643
  43. 32. Factors affecting second language acquisition: Successes and nonsuccesses 667
  44. IV. Language and communication disorders Section 8: Developmental and neurological disorders
  45. 33 .The changing profile of Specific Language Impairment 689
  46. 34. Neuroplasticity and development: Discourse in children with perinatal stroke and children with language impairment 705
  47. 35 .Types of developmental dyslexia 721
  48. 36. Implicit learning in developmental dyslexia as demonstrated by the Serial Reaction Time (SRT) and the Artificial Grammar Learning (AGL) tasks 753
  49. 37. Speech and language in congenitally deaf children with a cochlear implant 765
  50. 38. Parental involvement in early intervention for children with hearing loss 793
  51. 39. Communication, language, and speech in young children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) 811
  52. 40. Language in people with Williams syndrome 829
  53. 41. Making language accessible for people with cognitive disabilities: Intellectual disability as a test case 845
  54. IV Language and communication disorders Section 9: Disorders in aging
  55. 42. Brain and language in healthy aging 863
  56. 43. Language impairments in acquired aphasia: Features and frameworks 881
  57. 44 .Language in neurodegenerative diseases 899
  58. Index 919
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