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On describing idiosyncratic phonologic systems.

S Camarata, J Gandour

    The Journal of Speech and Hearing Disorders
    |August 1, 1984
    PubMed
    Summary
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    A new procedure for analyzing child speech patterns revealed that alveolar and velar stops appear in unique complementary distributions, missed by standard phonologic process analysis for accurate diagnosis.

    Area of Science:

    • Speech-language pathology
    • Linguistics
    • Child phonology

    Background:

    • Standard phonologic process analysis may miss idiosyncratic patterns in children's speech.
    • Accurate diagnosis of phonologic impairment is crucial for effective treatment.

    Observation:

    • A novel phone distribution procedure was applied to a phonologically impaired child.
    • The child exhibited an unusual distribution of alveolar and velar stops.

    Findings:

    • Alveolar stops occurred exclusively before high vowels.
    • Velar stops occurred exclusively before nonhigh vowels, indicating complementary distribution.
    • Phonologic process analysis failed to identify this specific distribution pattern.

    Implications:

    Related Experiment Videos

    • Phonologic process analysis requires supplementation with other methods for comprehensive diagnosis.
    • Identifying unusual distribution patterns is key for selecting appropriate clinical targets.
    • This approach can improve the accuracy of clinical diagnosis and treatment planning in pediatric speech sound disorders.