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Events and Research in Speech, Language, and Hearing Disorders

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    These news items are gleaned from over 500 sources on the Internet and are provided as a service to our patrons. The University of Texas at Dallas does not guarantee the veracity, reliability or completeness of any information provided on this page, in the comments, or in any hyperlink appearing on this page

  • Callier Center News

    Program to Help Families Facing Autism Challenge

    Reaching out to families touched by autism, the UT Dallas Callier Center for Communication Disorders is offering a pilot program to help parents facing a child's new diagnosis.

    Strategy Training and Response to Therapy (START) focuses on children 18 months to 5 years old who have been recently diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder and who have received an autism assessment through Children’s Medical Center of Dallas..

    Read the rest of the story at the UTD News Center

    A Cure For Tinnitus at UTD?

    A promising new therapy has made its way from Australia to the States. The Callier Center for Communication Disorders at University of Texas at Dallas is one of about 200 medical centers offering Neuromonics, a treatment device for tinnitus developed by an Australian audiologist, Dr. Paul Davis.

    Dallas audiologist Anne Howell, head of Callier's tinnitus clinic, says the treatment works by retraining neural pathways in the brain. As a result, the auditory system is desensitized to the sound.

    Read the rest of the story at The Dallas Observer
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The role of phonological awareness in mediating between reading and listening to speech

Posted by Callier Library on January 10, 2008

from Language and Cognitive Processes

Previous studies have shown that phonological awareness correlates with children’s reading aloud and also adults’ literacy experience. More recent research has further suggested that phonological awareness is associated with the processing of spoken language, which is a correlate of reading comprehension. In this paper, I argue that phonological awareness, reading, and spoken language are intercorrelated because phonological awareness mediates between the processing of written and spoken language, so far as the derivation of phonological information from print and speech is concerned. For meaning activation, phonological awareness may not have a role to play in linking reading to spoken language. In native and non-native adult speakers of English, I demonstrated: (1) a correlation between processing speech for meaning (i.e., listening comprehension) and reading comprehension, but not reading aloud; (2) a correlation between processing speech for phonological information (i.e., auditory phonological priming and phoneme discrimination) and reading aloud, but not reading comprehension; and (3) that phonological awareness mediated (2) but not (1). The implication is that phonological awareness binds reading and listening to speech only at the level of deriving a phonological code.

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