Phonological Processing Flashcards

1
Q

What is Phonological Processing?

A

The ability to use speech sounds (phonemes) for coding information when reading, speaking, and listening.

Phonological processing skills play an important role in academic tasks such as reading and writing.

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2
Q

What are the 3 subtypes of phonological processing?

A

Phonological Awareness

Phonological Memory

Rapid Naming

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3
Q

What is a Phoneme?

A

A sound in a language that has its own distinct sound.

The smallest unit of a spoken language.

Ex: “c” in the word “car” since it has its own distinct sound and alone has no meaning.

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4
Q

What is Phonological Awareness?

A

An individual’s awareness of and access to the sound structure of their oral language.

The spoken words of a language represent strings of phonemes that signal differences in meaning.

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5
Q

The process of Phonological Awareness

A

As children develop, they demonstrate awareness of increasingly smaller phonological units of speech.

  1. Initially, their awareness is limited to word-length phonological units. (ex: recognizing the 2 parts in cow-boy).
  2. Next, they become aware of syllables within words. (ex: recognizing each syllable of the two-syllable word, seven).
  3. Eventually, awareness proceeds within the syllable to recognizing the individual phonemes.
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6
Q

What is Phonological Memory?

A

Coding information phonologically for temporary storage in working or short-term memory.

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7
Q

What is the Phonological Loop?

A

The part of memory is most involved in storing phonological information.

It provides brief verbatim storage of auditory information.

Consists of two parts working together:
1. Phonological Store - “tape recorder” that holds most recent two seconds worth of auditory info.
2. Articulatory Control - helps pass info through the phonological loop and can refresh info already in the loop so that It can be stored for longer than 2 seconds.

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8
Q

Phonological memory impairments can constrain the ability to learn new written and spoken vocabulary?

A

True!

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9
Q

Deficient phonological memory does not appear to impair either word-level reading or listening to a noticeable extent?

A

True, assuming that the words involved are already in the individual’s vocabulary.

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10
Q

What is Rapid Naming?

A

Rapid naming of digits, letters, objects, or colors.

Requires efficient retrieval of phonological info from long-term or permanent, memory.

Also referred to as orthographic processing.

Has visual components, mostly graphemes (smallest unit of writing) or glyphs (pictures/symbols that represent words).

Hybrid Ability. Successful performance depends on how fast an examinee can scan and encode a phonological response.

Requires speed and processing of visual & phonological info.

Can predict poor performance in reading.

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11
Q

What are double deficits?

A

When an individual has deficits in both rapid naming and phonological awareness.

They appear to have greater difficulty learning to read words accurately and fluently.

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