Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Substitution patterns in the phonology of Spanish-speaking children (B.A. Goldstein, 2005) Presented by Vanessa Tobar
2
Previous Studies Mostly with American English-speaking children Phonemes with the highest frequency of substitution: /θ/, /ð/, /ɹ/, /tʃ/ and /dʒ/ Few substitutes used for each target. (Bassi, 1993; Larkins, 1983; Smit, 1993) Presented by Vanessa Tobar 11/29/10
3
Consonant Cluster Patterns in English (Smit, 1993) /kl/ [k] /s/-cluster reduction to second member* /pl/ [pw] /pl/ [pəl] Presented by Vanessa Tobar 11/29/10
4
Cross-Linguistic phenomenons? Presented by Vanessa Tobar 11/29/10
5
Participants Typically developing children (3;2-4;11) Children with phonological disorders (3;1-4;9) L1 Puerto Rican dialect Spanish Presented by Vanessa Tobar 11/29/10
6
Assessment of Phonological Disabilities APD (Iglesias & Goldstein, 1993) Single word phonological assessment CVCV Clusters Multi-syllabic words Presented by Vanessa Tobar 11/29/10
7
Things to note… Clusters and singletons analyzed separately. Dialectal features not errors /kaɾta/ [kalta] (“letter”) Voiced stops fricative (inter-vocalically) /b/, /d/, /g/ [β], [ð], [ɣ] Syllable initial and final data combined for this study. Presented by Vanessa Tobar 11/29/10
8
Results: Sounds Substituted for Presented by Vanessa Tobar 11/29/10
9
Typically Developing Children Presented by Vanessa Tobar 11/29/10 Substituted Phonemes:
10
Children with Phonological Disorders Presented by Vanessa Tobar 11/29/10 Substituted Phonemes:
11
Results: Sounds Substituted To Presented by Vanessa Tobar 11/29/10
12
Typically Developing Children Presented by Vanessa Tobar 11/29/10
13
Children with Phonological Disorders Presented by Vanessa Tobar 11/29/10
14
Children with Phonological Disorders Presented by Vanessa Tobar 11/29/10
15
Typically Developing Children Presented by Vanessa Tobar 11/29/10
16
Results: Clusters Presented by Vanessa Tobar 11/29/10
18
Overall Typically Developing Children: [ð], [β], /r/, /ɾ/, and [ɣ] Children with Phonological Disorders: /s/, /r/, /tʃ/, /k/, and [β] Presented by Vanessa Tobar 11/29/10
19
Questions 1.Would the same results yeild if children tested were bilingual in a language in which the voiced fricatives and stops actually had phonemic contrast? 2. Would methods have to be altered when studying a dialect that does not weaken or delete syllable final consonants? (/s/ &/n/) Presented by Vanessa Tobar 11/29/10
20
Questions 3. Is there a characteristic within language types/groups that allow studies like this to be more generalized and widely applicable? Presented by Vanessa Tobar 11/29/10
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.