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Performance of Children With Hearing Loss on an Audiovisual Version of a Nonword Repetition Task
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In: Lang Speech Hear Serv Sch (2020)
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Vocal Development Landmarks Interview (Moeller et al., 2019) ...
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Vocal Development Landmarks Interview (Moeller et al., 2019) ...
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Validation of a Parent Report Tool for Monitoring Early Vocal Stages in Infants
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An Introduction to the Outcomes of Children with Hearing Loss Study
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Abstract:
The landscape of service provision for young children with hearing loss has shifted in recent years as a result of newborn hearing screening and the early provision of interventions, including hearing technologies. It is expected that early service provision will minimize or prevent linguistic delays that typically accompany untreated permanent childhood hearing loss. The post-newborn hearing screening era has seen a resurgence of interest in empirically examining the outcomes of children with hearing loss to determine if service innovations have resulted in expected improvements in children’s functioning. The Outcomes of Children with Hearing Loss (OCHL) project was among these recent research efforts, and this introductory article provides background in the form of literature review and theoretical discussion to support the goals of the study. The OCHL project was designed to examine the language and auditory outcomes of infants and preschool-aged children with permanent, bilateral, mild-to-severe hearing loss and to identify factors that moderate the relationship between hearing loss and longitudinal outcomes. We propose that children who are hard of hearing experience limitations in access to linguistic input, which lead to a decrease in uptake of language exposure and an overall reduction in linguistic experience. We explore this hypothesis in relation to three primary factors that are proposed to influence children’s access to linguistic input: aided audibility, duration and consistency of hearing aid (HA) use, and characteristics of caregiver input.
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Keyword:
Article
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URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4704131/ https://doi.org/10.1097/AUD.0000000000000210 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26731159
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Quantity and Quality of Caregivers’ Linguistic Input to 18-month and 3-year-old Children who are Hard of Hearing
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Linguistic Input, Electronic Media, and Communication Outcomes of Toddlers with Hearing Loss
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The Influence of Hearing Aids on the Speech and Language Development of Children With Hearing Loss
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Quantity of Parental Language in the Home Environments of Hard-of-Hearing 2-Year-Olds
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Longitudinal Development of Phonology and Morphology in Children with Late-Identified Mild-Moderate Sensorineural Hearing Loss
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Mothers' mental state input and theory of mind understanding in deaf and hearing children
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In: ETD collection for University of Nebraska - Lincoln (2002)
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