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Journal of Speech and Hearing Disorders Vol.53 262-270 August 1988.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Perception and Production of the Final /s-ts/ Contrast in Dutch by Misarticulating Children

Emile M. J. A. Raaymakers 1 and Thom A. M. Crul 2

1 Interfaculty Research Unit for Language and Speech University of Nijmegen, the Netherlands
2 Audiological Center University of Nijmegen, the Netherlands

This Study investigates the specific relationship between speech perception and speech production by comparing 6- and 7-year-old children who misarticulated the final consonant cluster/-ts/ with three control groups. One control group of children misarticulated other phonemes than the specific/-ts/ cluster, another group of children had no articulation problems at all, and a third control group consisted of normally articulating adults. Perception was studied by assessing identification functions on a /moeligs/-to-/moeligts/ speech continuum in which the silence period had been manipulated. Production was analyzed by measuring the silence periods in productions of the Dutch word muts. The results show a clear hierarchical trend: The poorer the articulation proficiency of a group, the more variability there is in both production and perception. In perception, this variability is not restricted to the problematic /-ts/ cluster but includes the whole /-s/-to-/-ts/ contrast. Furthermore, it appears that a general as well as a specific relationship exists between perception and production and that the character of this relationship does not support the motor theory of speech perception.

Submitted on May 13, 1987
Accepted on September 22, 1987







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