2017
DOI: 10.1177/2396941517692809
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Phonological processing, grammar and sentence comprehension in older and younger generations of Swedish children with cochlear implants

Abstract: Background and aims: Phonological processing skills measured by nonword repetition, are consistently found to be hampered in children with severe/profound hearing impairment and cochlear implants, compared to children with normal hearing. Many studies also find that grammar is affected. There are no studies exploring grammar in the Swedish population of children with cochlear implants. Documentation is also sparse regarding if and how language development in children with cochlear implants at the group level h… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(7 citation statements)
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References 64 publications
(118 reference statements)
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“…According to these authors, omissions of determiners could be associated with prosody, while substitution errors in noun agreement or verb agreement could indicate grammatical and/or processing deficits, suggesting that children with CI do not show uniform grammatical profiles. This particular difficulty in grammatical morphology in children with CIs has also been examined using natural speech samples in Italian (Caselli et al., 2012; Chilosi et al., 2013), Dutch (Faes et al., 2015; Hammer & Coene, 2016), Swedish (Hansson et al., 2017) and Hebrew (Adi‐Bensaid & Greenstein, 2020). The question of the cross‐linguistic nature of grammatical difficulties in children with CIs should be addressed in the light of research on the cross‐linguistic nature of typical language development in several structurally different languages.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to these authors, omissions of determiners could be associated with prosody, while substitution errors in noun agreement or verb agreement could indicate grammatical and/or processing deficits, suggesting that children with CI do not show uniform grammatical profiles. This particular difficulty in grammatical morphology in children with CIs has also been examined using natural speech samples in Italian (Caselli et al., 2012; Chilosi et al., 2013), Dutch (Faes et al., 2015; Hammer & Coene, 2016), Swedish (Hansson et al., 2017) and Hebrew (Adi‐Bensaid & Greenstein, 2020). The question of the cross‐linguistic nature of grammatical difficulties in children with CIs should be addressed in the light of research on the cross‐linguistic nature of typical language development in several structurally different languages.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One consistent finding from studies of nonword repetition in children with CIs and NH children is that nonword repetition skills are weaker and less efficient in children with CIs compared to NH peers (e.g. Casserly & Pisoni 2013;Cleary et al 2002;Hansson et al 2017;Nittrouer et al 2014;Willstedt -Svensson et al 2004). It is likely that underspecified phonological representations contribute to the variance on nonword repetition tasks observed in CI users compared to NH peers (e.g., Nittrouer et al 2013Nittrouer et al , 2014Nittrouer et al , 2017.…”
Section: Rapid Phonological Codingmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Nor did text quality ratings change after the intervention. Studies on students with HL all emphasize the great heterogeneity of the population [1,48,49]. The present study is no exception.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 50%