Department of Speech-Language-Hearing Sciences, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, MN, USA.
Int J Lang Commun Disord. 2021 Mar;56(2):374-388. doi: 10.1111/1460-6984.12610. Epub 2021 Feb 17.
Accurate and detailed records of children's speech are a critical component of competent service delivery in speech-language pathology/speech and language therapy (SLP/SLT). Previous research has shown that during speech-sound acquisition, children gradually learn to produce sounds in adult-like manners. Continuous rating scales are a way to track this gradual learning.
To examine whether clinical experience affects the ability and willingness to rate children's speech production using continuous rating scales.
METHODS & PROCEDURES: An online survey was administered to 81 US-based SLPs/SLTs, binned into more- and less-experienced groups, and 20 non-SLPs/SLTs. The survey included a speech-sound rating task in which participants rated the production of place of articulation in children's productions of word-initial /θ/, /s/, /ʃ/, /d/, /ɡ/, /t/ and /k/ on a nine-point equally appearing interval scale. We examined the extent to which these were accurate (i.e., the extent to which they matched laboratory measures of production characteristics) and the extent to which the ratings were gradual (i.e., they used the entire rating scales, rather than just the endpoints).
There were no consistent differences between non-SLPs/SLTs, less-experienced SLPs/SLTs and more-experienced SLPs/SLTs in a measure of the accuracy of responses. More consistent differences were found in the extent to which listeners used the endpoints of the scale: greater experience was associated with greater use of the endpoint values.
CONCLUSIONS & IMPLICATIONS: More-experienced SLPs/SLTs are less likely to use the entire range of continuous rating scales to rate children's speech accuracy than less-experienced SLPs/SLTs or clinically untrained listeners. Implications for service delivery are discussed. What this paper adds What is already known on the subject Children's productions of individual sounds, like /k/, become gradually more adult-like over the course of development. For a child who has a [t] for /k/ error, this gradual development means that children's productions become progressively less like /t/ and more like /k/ over development. Phonetic transcription does not capture this gradual development. In contrast, studies have shown that continuous ratings of children's speech (such as rating productions on a scale anchored by the text "the 't' sound" at one end and "the 'k' sound" at the other end) can capture this gradual development. What this paper adds to existing knowledge To determine continuous ratings are clinically feasible, we must first determine whether clinical experience affects people's use of continuous rating scales to rate children's speech. We conducted an on-line speech perception experiment in which 81 speech-language pathologists/speech and language therapists (SLPs/SLTs) and 20 non-SLPs/SLTs rated 60 productions by children on continuous rating scales. The 60 stimuli included many sounds that had been independently verified to be intermediate productions (i.e., a target /k/ that was neither completely /k/-like nor completely /t/-like). Non-SLPs/SLTs and less-experienced SLPs/SLTs rated those intermediate sounds with intermediate ratings (i.e., somewhere on the midpoint of a continuous scale). In contrast, more-experienced SLPs/SLTs were more likely to rate those sounds as instances of endpoints (i.e., as either /k/ or /t/). What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work? This finding suggests that clinical experience is paradoxically associated with a reduced tendency to use the entire range of responses on continuous rating scales. This finding suggests that we must better understand the cause of this reduced tendency, so that clinicians at all levels can use continuous rating scales equally effectively.
准确且详细的儿童言语记录是言语语言病理学/言语和语言治疗(SLP/SLT)提供专业服务的关键组成部分。先前的研究表明,在言语语音习得过程中,儿童逐渐以成人的方式学习发音。连续评分量表是跟踪这种渐进学习的一种方式。
研究临床经验是否会影响使用连续评分量表评估儿童言语产生能力和意愿。
向 81 名美国的 SLP/SLT 和 20 名非 SLP/SLT 进行了在线调查,将他们分为经验更丰富和经验较少的两组。调查包括一个语音评分任务,参与者在儿童单词起始音 /θ/、/s/、/ʃ/、/d/、/ɡ/、/t/和 /k/的发音上,使用九点等距区间量表进行位置发音的评估。我们检查了这些评估的准确性(即与生产特征的实验室测量相匹配的程度)和渐进性(即他们是否使用了整个评分量表,而不仅仅是端点)。
在反应准确性方面,非 SLP/SLT、经验较少的 SLP/SLT 和经验更丰富的 SLP/SLT 之间没有一致的差异。在听众使用量表端点的程度上发现了更一致的差异:经验越多,越倾向于使用端点值。
与经验较少的 SLP/SLT 或临床未经训练的听众相比,经验更丰富的 SLP/SLT 不太可能使用整个连续评分量表来评估儿童的言语准确性。讨论了对服务提供的影响。
儿童个体声音的产生,如 /k/,随着发育的进行逐渐变得更像成人。对于有 [t] 替代 /k/ 错误的孩子来说,这种逐渐的发展意味着孩子的发音在发育过程中会越来越不像 /t/,而越来越像 /k/。音标无法捕捉到这种逐渐的发展。相比之下,研究表明,儿童言语的连续评分(例如,在以“'t'音”为一端和“'k'音”为另一端的文本锚定的量表上对发音进行评分)可以捕捉到这种逐渐的发展。
为了确定连续评分具有临床可行性,我们必须首先确定临床经验是否会影响人们使用连续评分量表来评估儿童的言语。我们进行了一项在线语音感知实验,其中 81 名言语语言病理学家/言语和语言治疗师(SLP/SLT)和 20 名非 SLP/SLT 对儿童的连续评分量表上的 60 个发音进行了评分。这 60 个刺激物包括许多已被独立验证为中间发音的声音(即,既不完全像 /k/ 也不完全像 /t/ 的目标 /k/)。非 SLP/SLT 和经验较少的 SLP/SLT 以中间评分(即在连续量表的中点)对这些中间声音进行评分。相比之下,经验更丰富的 SLP/SLT 更有可能将这些声音评为端点(即 /k/ 或 /t/)。
这方面的潜在或实际临床意义是什么?这一发现表明,临床经验与减少使用连续评分量表整个范围的趋势相反。这一发现表明,我们必须更好地理解这种减少趋势的原因,以便各级临床医生都能同样有效地使用连续评分量表。