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Articles

Consonant accuracy and intelligibility of Southern Vietnamese children

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Pages 315-324 | Received 15 Sep 2020, Accepted 03 Feb 2021, Published online: 01 Mar 2021
 

ABSTRACT

Understanding typically developing children’s speech acquisition is useful to assist speech-language pathologists’ diagnosis and intervention planning for children with speech sound disorders. The aim of this research was to investigate Southern Vietnamese-speaking children’s speech accuracy and intelligibility. Participants were 132 children aged 3;0–5;11 living in Southern Viet Nam (Ho Chi Minh City) whose consonants, semivowels, vowels, and tones were assessed using the Vietnamese Speech Assessment (VSA) and parent-reported intelligibility was assessed using the Vietnamese version of the Intelligibility in Context Scale (ICS-VN). Participants’ percentage of consonants correct (PCC) was significantly lower for the younger children compared with the other age groups. Mean PCC was 89.19 (SD = 7.83) at 3;0–3;5 years and 99.31 (SD = 1.33) at 5;6–5;11 years. Percentage of semivowels correct was higher than the percentage of initial and final consonants correct. Participants produced tones and vowels accurately even from the youngest age group. On average, the participants were reported to be usually to always intelligible and were more intelligible with their parents than other communication partners. There was a positive, weak correlation between speech accuracy (PCC) and intelligibility (ICS-VN). There was no sex effect for PCC and no significant effect for age or sex on intelligibility. These data provide information about typical speech acquisition to support the emerging speech-language pathology profession in Viet Nam.

Acknowledgements

This research was supported by a grant from Trinh Foundation Australia to the first author, an Australian Research Council Discovery Grant (DP180102848) to the second author, an Australian Awards Scholarship to the third author, and Charles Sturt University. The authors thank the preschool principals, teachers, parents, children and volunteers who participated and Ninh Dang Vu for data entry support.

Disclosure statement

The authors are co-authors of the Vietnamese Speech Assessment and McLeod is a co-author of the Intelligibility in Context Scale.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by Trinh Foundation Australia; Australian Government Australia Awards Scholarship; Australian Research Council (AU) [grant number DP180102848].

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