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Commentaries

Conditions in which prosodic impairments occur

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Pages 293-297 | Published online: 20 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

We welcome the lead article (Peppé, 2009) which raises important issues with regard to the definition of the term prosody, the characterization of prosodic impairments and issues of prosody intervention. We take this opportunity to focus on the issue of prosodic impairment in two developmental conditions: a population with speech and language impairment including those with SLI, and individuals with Williams syndrome. We review the literature on prosody in these two populations and we discuss the issue of what may be considered a prosodic impairment as opposed to a delay in the acquisition of prosodic abilities in these two conditions.

Notes

Notes

1. “Intonation” here refers to form-level tasks in the early version of PEPS-C

2. We have only considered receptive language ability because this was used as a measure for matching the language level of children with WS and younger typically developing children.

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