Affiliation:
1. Medical Research Council Institute of Hearing Research Clinical Section, Nottingham University Hospitals Trust (NUHT), and National Institute for Health Research National Biomedical Research Unit in Hearing, NUHT, Nottingham, United Kingdom
2. Medical Research Council Institute of Hearing Research Clinical Section, NUHT
Abstract
Purpose
Parental reports of communication, listening, and behavior in children receiving a clinical diagnosis of specific language impairment (SLI) or auditory processing disorder (APD) were compared with direct tests of intelligence, memory, language, phonology, literacy, and speech intelligibility. The primary aim was to identify whether there were differences between these characteristics in children with SLI or APD.
Method
Normally hearing children who were clinically diagnosed with SLI (
n
= 22) or APD (
n
= 19), and a quasirandom sample of mainstream school (MS) children (
n
= 47) aged 6–13 years, underwent tests of verbal and nonverbal IQ, digit span, nonsense word repetition, Spoonerisms, reading, grammar, and sentence and VCV nonword intelligibility. Parents completed questionnaires on the children’s communication, listening, and behavior.
Results
There was generally no difference between the performance of the children with SLI and the children with APD on the questionnaire and test measures, and both groups consistently and significantly underperformed compared with the children in the MS group. Speech intelligibility in both noise and quiet was unimpaired in the SLI and APD groups.
Conclusion
Despite clinical diagnoses of SLI or APD, the 2 groups of children had very similar behavioral and parental report profiles, suggesting that the children were differentially diagnosed based on their referral route rather than on actual differences.
Publisher
American Speech Language Hearing Association
Subject
Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
118 articles.
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