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Verbal working memory in children with cochlear implants

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextOnline resources: In: Journal of Speech Language and Hearing Research Vol. 60 (November 2017) p. 3342-3364Summary: Purpose: Verbal working memory in children with cochlear implants and children with normal hearing was examined. Participants: Ninety-three fourth graders (47 with normal hearing, 46 with cochlear implants) participated, all of whom were in a longitudinal study and had working memory assessed 2 years earlier. Method: A dual-component model of working memory was adopted, and a serial recall task measured storage and processing. Potential predictor variables were phonological awareness, vocabulary knowledge, nonverbal IQ, and several treatment variables. Potential dependent functions were literacy, expressive language, and speech-in-noise recognition.
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Purpose: Verbal working memory in children with cochlear
implants and children with normal hearing was examined.
Participants: Ninety-three fourth graders (47 with normal
hearing, 46 with cochlear implants) participated, all of whom
were in a longitudinal study and had working memory
assessed 2 years earlier.
Method: A dual-component model of working memory was
adopted, and a serial recall task measured storage and
processing. Potential predictor variables were phonological
awareness, vocabulary knowledge, nonverbal IQ, and several
treatment variables. Potential dependent functions were literacy,
expressive language, and speech-in-noise recognition.

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