Authors
D Kimbrough Oller, Rebecca E Eilers, A Rebecca Neal, Heidi K Schwartz
Publication date
1999/7/1
Source
Journal of communication disorders
Volume
32
Issue
4
Pages
223-245
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
During the canonical stage of infant babbling, infants produce well-formed syllables, often in reduplicated sequences such as “bababa.” Although nearly all infants with normal hearing begin the canonical stage by 10 months of age, a few are delayed, and these infants may be of special interest. Recent studies indicate that late onset of canonical babbling may be a predictor of disorders. A simple screening procedure that focuses on canonical babbling was used to evaluate over 3400 infants at risk who were about 10 months of age. Among infants who showed late onset of canonical babbling, fewer than half had been previously diagnosed as having a significant medical problem that might have accounted for the delay. A follow-up study indicated that infants with delayed canonical babbling had smaller production vocabularies at 18, 24, and 30 months than did infants in the control group. The results suggest that …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
DK Oller, RE Eilers, AR Neal, HK Schwartz - Journal of communication disorders, 1999