Abstract
This study extends prior investigations of children's abilities
to conceptualize
distinctive phonological features in development. The purpose was
to establish the relationship between a child's productive and
conceptual knowledge, and to examine its potential influence on phonological
change. Six children evidencing phonological disorders (aged 3;4
to 5;7) participated in evaluations of the productive sound system and
the metalinguistic ability to classify phonological information, with
particular emphasis on fricatives. Then, children were enrolled in
clinical treatment aimed at accurate production of fricatives. Following
treatment, production and classification abilities were again tested.
Results indicated that if a child's productive knowledge of distinctive
featural contrasts changed following treatment, there was also a corresponding
change in conceptual knowledge. The specific featural
dimensions that were used to classify phonological information were
either in parallel to, or in advance of, those features also used in
production by the child. Conceptual knowledge was thus equal to or
better than productive knowledge for these children.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
General Psychology,Linguistics and Language,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
11 articles.
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