Phonological Awareness at 5 years of age in Children who use Hearing Aids or Cochlear Implants.

T. Ching, L. Cupples
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引用次数: 13

Abstract

Children with hearing loss typically underachieve in reading, possibly as a result of their underdeveloped phonological skills. This study addressed the questions of whether the development of phonological awareness (PA) is influenced by 1) the degree of hearing loss; and 2) whether performance of children with severe-profound hearing loss differed according to the hearing devices used. Drawing on data collected as part of the Longitudinal Outcomes of Children with Hearing Impairment (LOCHI, www. OUTCOMES nal.gov.au) study, the authors found that sound-matching scores of children with hearing loss ranging from mild to profound degrees were, on average, within the normal range. The degree of hearing loss did not have a significant impact on scores, but there was a non-significant tendency for the proportion of children who achieved zero scores to increase with increase in hearing loss. For children with severe hearing loss, there was no significant group difference in scores among children who used bilateral hearing aids, bimodal fitting (a cochlear implant and a hearing aid in contralateral ears), and bilateral cochlear implants. Although there is a need for further prospective research, professionals have an important role in targeting PA skills for rehabilitation of young children with hearing loss.
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使用助听器或人工耳蜗儿童5岁时的语音意识。
听力受损的儿童通常在阅读方面表现不佳,这可能是他们语音技能不发达的结果。本研究探讨了语音意识的发展是否受到以下因素的影响:1)听力损失程度;2)重度重度听力损失患儿的听力表现是否因使用不同的助听器而不同。根据“听力障碍儿童纵向结果”(LOCHI, www.OUTCOMESnal.gov.au)研究收集的数据,作者发现,从轻度到重度听力损失的儿童的声音匹配分数平均在正常范围内。听力损失程度对得分没有显著影响,但得分为零的儿童比例随听力损失的增加而增加的趋势不显著。对于严重听力损失的儿童,使用双侧助听器、双模配合器(双侧耳蜗植入和对侧耳蜗植入)和双侧耳蜗植入的儿童在评分上没有显著的组间差异。虽然需要进一步的前瞻性研究,但专业人员在针对听力损失儿童的听力技能康复方面具有重要作用。
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Phonological Awareness at 5 years of age in Children who use Hearing Aids or Cochlear Implants. Language Outcomes in Children With Unilateral Hearing Loss: A Review Satisfaction with Communication Using Remote Face-to-Face Language Interpretation Services with Spanish-Speaking Parents: A Pilot Study Understanding Limited Use of Amplification in Infants and Children Who Are Hard of Hearing Access is the Issue, Not Hearing Loss: New Policy Clarification Requires Schools to Ensure Effective Communication Access
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