Specificity of phonological representations in U.S. English-speaking late talkers and typical talkers

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Abstract

Late talkers are a heterogeneous group of children who experience delayed language development in the absence of other known causes. Late talkers show delays in expressive phonological development, but less is known about their receptive phonological development. In the current study, U.S. monolingual English-speaking typical talkers (TTs) (n = 23, mean age = 26.27 months, 57% male; 78.3% White) and late talkers (n = 22, mean age = 24.57 months, 59% male, 72.7% White) completed a Looking-While-Listening task to assess their sensitivity to mispronunciations. Results revealed that late talkers and TTs looked to the referent of a word for a shorter duration when it was mispronounced than when it was correctly pronounced, suggesting they were sensitive to mispronunciations. However, there were no significant differences between the two groups in their sensitivity to mispronunciations.

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Curtis, P. R., Estabrook, R., Roberts, M. Y., & Weisleder, A. (2023). Specificity of phonological representations in U.S. English-speaking late talkers and typical talkers. Infancy, 28(4), 771–792. https://doi.org/10.1111/infa.12536

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