IRIS publication 104778493
Investigating prosodic ability in Williams Syndrome.
RIS format for Endnote and similar
TY - JOUR - Catterall, C., Howard, S., Stojanovik, V., Szczerbinski, M., Wells, B. - 2006 - Unknown - Clinical Linguistics and Phonetics - Investigating prosodic ability in Williams Syndrome. - Published - () - 20 - 7-8 - 531 - 538 - This paper investigates whether people with Williams syndrome (WS) have prosodic impairments affecting their expression and comprehension of four main uses of intonation. Two adolescent males with WS were assessed using the PEPS-C battery, which considers prosodic abilities within a psycholinguistic framework, assessing prosodic form and function in both the input and output domains. The performances of the subjects with WS were compared with control data for age and language-comprehension matched children. The results revealed significant prosodic impairment affecting all areas of the profile. Crucially, however, different profiles of strengths and weaknesses were revealed for the two subjects. The results support the growing view that WS is a heterogeneous population in terms of linguistic abilities. - 10.1080/02699200500266380 DA - 2006/NaN ER -
BIBTeX format for JabRef and similar
@article{V104778493, = {Catterall, C. and Howard, S. and Stojanovik, V. and Szczerbinski, M. and Wells, B. }, = {2006}, = {Unknown}, = {Clinical Linguistics and Phonetics}, = {Investigating prosodic ability in Williams Syndrome.}, = {Published}, = {()}, = {20}, = {7-8}, pages = {531--538}, = {{This paper investigates whether people with Williams syndrome (WS) have prosodic impairments affecting their expression and comprehension of four main uses of intonation. Two adolescent males with WS were assessed using the PEPS-C battery, which considers prosodic abilities within a psycholinguistic framework, assessing prosodic form and function in both the input and output domains. The performances of the subjects with WS were compared with control data for age and language-comprehension matched children. The results revealed significant prosodic impairment affecting all areas of the profile. Crucially, however, different profiles of strengths and weaknesses were revealed for the two subjects. The results support the growing view that WS is a heterogeneous population in terms of linguistic abilities.}}, = {10.1080/02699200500266380}, source = {IRIS} }
Data as stored in IRIS
AUTHORS | Catterall, C., Howard, S., Stojanovik, V., Szczerbinski, M., Wells, B. | ||
YEAR | 2006 | ||
MONTH | Unknown | ||
JOURNAL_CODE | Clinical Linguistics and Phonetics | ||
TITLE | Investigating prosodic ability in Williams Syndrome. | ||
STATUS | Published | ||
TIMES_CITED | () | ||
SEARCH_KEYWORD | |||
VOLUME | 20 | ||
ISSUE | 7-8 | ||
START_PAGE | 531 | ||
END_PAGE | 538 | ||
ABSTRACT | This paper investigates whether people with Williams syndrome (WS) have prosodic impairments affecting their expression and comprehension of four main uses of intonation. Two adolescent males with WS were assessed using the PEPS-C battery, which considers prosodic abilities within a psycholinguistic framework, assessing prosodic form and function in both the input and output domains. The performances of the subjects with WS were compared with control data for age and language-comprehension matched children. The results revealed significant prosodic impairment affecting all areas of the profile. Crucially, however, different profiles of strengths and weaknesses were revealed for the two subjects. The results support the growing view that WS is a heterogeneous population in terms of linguistic abilities. | ||
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DOI_LINK | 10.1080/02699200500266380 | ||
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