Sentence Length Effects on Intelligibility in Two Groups of Older Children With Neurodevelopmental Disorders.
Meghan Darling-WhiteRachel PolkowitzPublished in: American journal of speech-language pathology (2023)
The primary findings of this study include the following: (a) Unlike in typically developing children, sentence length continues to influence intelligibility well into adolescence for children with neurodevelopmental disorders, and (b) sentence length may influence intelligibility differently in children with CP than in children with DS; however, other factors besides the type of neurodevelopmental disorder (e.g., severity of speech motor involvement and/or cognitive-linguistic impairment) could play a role in the relationship between sentence length and intelligibility and must be investigated in future studies.