英文摘要 |
The main purpose of this study was to compare the auditory processing ability of school-aged children with specific language impairments with that of age/IQ matched students. In addition, the correlations among the different aspects of auditory processing abilities and language abilities were examined. Twenty school- aged children with specific language impairments (SLI) and twenty matched students participated in this study. All 40 participants were assessed via the standardized intelligience, language and computerized auditory processing tests to measure their nonverbal intelligience, language abilities, and auditory perception abilities. The results showed that the children with SLI performed significantly poorer on the frequency discrimination, speech discrimination, and lexical tone discrimination tasks compared to the matched group. This indicated that children with SLI have auditory perception difficulties across different features. Children with SLI performed better on a frequency discrimination task when the frequency difference of the tone pair was enlarged. Also, when the duration of speech sounds (/ba/-/da/) was longer, children with SLI performed better on the speech discrimination task. However, there were no significant effects of lexical tone duration and inter-stimulus interval on the tone discrimination performance.The auditory processing abilities were significantly correlated with language abilities, and the regression analysis revealed that lexical tone discrimination was the best predictor of language ability. Deficits in both timing processing and spectral resolution of sounds were exhibited in children with SLI and could influence their language-learning process. Further considerations regarding assessment and intervention of the auditory processing of Mandarin-speaking children with SLI were discussed. |