英文摘要 |
A lot of research works about phonological processes have been done for English speaking children, but none for Mandarin speaking children. The aim of this research was to investigate the phonological processes in the speech of Mandarin speaking children and children with speech disorders. It was comprised of two studies. The Study 1 was to analyze the phonological processes in the speech errors of 326 children with age ranging from 2.5 to 6 years old. There were six age groups for children with 2.5-, 3-, 3.5-, 4-, 5-, and 6-year- old. The incidence and frequency of phonological processes for the six age groups were compared. The results showed that for these preschool children, the most frequent phonological processes were deretroflexion, backing, stopping, affricating, and deaspiration, with descending order respectively. As the age of groups increased, the incidence and frequency of phonological processes were significantly decreased. There were four phonological processes showed apparently suppressed: backing, stopping, affricating, and deaspiration in the groups of older ages(4-, 5- and 6-year-old). In the Study 2, the speech errors of 55 children with speech sound disorders were analyzed, and their frequency and types of phonological processes were compared with those of the normal children with the same age(5- and 6-year-old) in the Study 1. There were significantly differences between speech disorder group and the normal group in the frequency and the number of types in phonological processes; however, the types and the patterns of the incidence of the phonological processes were pretty similar. It suggests that the differences between the two groups were mostly in the quantitative aspect. Most children in the speech disorder group showed signs of speech developmental delay in the pattern of phonological process. With the frequency and the type numbers of phonological process as the predictive variables, the discriminant analysis showed that 83.4% of the original grouped cases were correctly classified. These results can provide information as developmental norm of phonological processes for preschool children as well as the children with speech sound disorders. |