Conversation Patterns between Children with Severe Speech Impairment and their Conversation Partners in Dyadic and Multi-person Interactions

Author:

Sotiropoulou Drosopoulou Christina1ORCID,Murray Janice1,Smith Martine2,Launonen Kaisa3,Neuvonen Kirsi3ORCID,Lynch Yvonne2,Stadskleiv Kristine4,Von Tetzchner Stephen5

Affiliation:

1. Health Professions Department, Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester, UK

2. Clinical Speech & Language Studies, University of Dublin, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland

3. Faculty of Medicine, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland

4. Department of Child Neurology, Oslo University Hospital, Oslo, Norway

5. Department of Psychology, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway

Abstract

Abstract Active engagement in interactions is crucial for the development of identity, social competence, and cognitive abilities. For children with severe speech impairment (SSI) who have little or no intelligible speech, active participation in conversations is challenging and can be critical for their social inclusion and participation. The present study investigated the conversational patterns emerging from interactions between children with SSI who use aided communication and typically speaking conversation partners (CPs) and explored whether active participation was different in interactions with different numbers of partners (dyadic versus multi-person interactions). An unusually large multilingual dataset was used (N = 85 conversations). This allowed us to systematically investigate discourse analysis measures indicating participation: the distribution of conversational control (initiations versus responses versus recodes) and summoning power (obliges versus comments). The findings suggest that (i) conversations were characterized by asymmetrical conversational patterns with CPs assuming most of the conversational control and (ii) multi-person interactions were noticeably more symmetric compared to dyadic, as children’s active participation in multi-person interactions was significantly increased. Clinical implications and best practice recommendations are discussed.

Funder

National Council for Scientific and Technological Development, the Foundation for Research Support of Rio de Janeiro, and the São Paulo Research Foundation

Ontario Federation of Cerebral Palsy and the Ontario Neurotrauma Foundation

Stichting Milo, Schijndel, and Royal Kentalis

Stiftelsen Sophies Minde and University of Oslo

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics,Communication

Reference56 articles.

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