Speech production changes were examined in 24 profoundly hearing- impaired children following implantation with the CLARION® Multi- Strategy(TM) Cochlear Implant. All study participants were implanted below the age of 6, and with 1 exception, the children were congenitally deaf, with little or no auditory experience prior to implantation. A within-subjects design was used in which the children's preoperative speech skills with hearing aids were compared to postoperative performance with the Clarion after 3 and 6 months of implant use. Production skills were evaluated with a measure designed specifically to assess hearing-impaired children's spontaneous use of early developing phonological patterns in words. The results revealed significant improvement over time in 8 of the 9 speech features examined. The greatest improvement occurred between the 3- and 6- month postoperative intervals, with more limited improvement evident between the preimplant and 3-month time periods. The results demonstrate that significant improvements occur in speech production skills in very young children with congenital deafness after they have used current implant technology for a relatively limited amount of time.
CITATION STYLE
Brown, C., & McDowall, D. W. (1999). Speech production results in children implanted with the CLARION® Implant. Annals of Otology, Rhinology and Laryngology, 108(4 II), 110–112. https://doi.org/10.1177/00034894991080s422
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