Title: Children with Verbal Auditory Agnosia
1Children with Verbal Auditory Agnosia
2What is Verbal Auditory Agnosia?
- Verbal auditory agnosia which is also called pure
word - deafness, is an acquired communication disorder
where - an individual is unable to comprehend spoken
- language, or repeat words. However, such
- individuals exhibit normal hearing and have
- spontaneous speech. This disorder is unlike
- aphasia because reading and writing capabilities
are - not affected. In some cases, individuals are not
able to - comprehend nonverbal sounds as well.
- (Heron, Macfarlane, and Papathanasiou, 1998)
-
3What causes Verbal Auditory Agnosia?
- Verbal auditory agnosia is caused by damage to
the left temporal lobe where the auditory
processing of speech occurs. - Damage can be due to a stroke (in adults),
traumatic brain injury, or epileptic seizures in
children. The onset of this type of seizure
occurs between three and seven years of age after
a period of normal cognitive and language
development. - (Van Slyke, 2002) (Heron et al., 1998)
4How Verbal Auditory Agnosia Affects Communication
- The child is unresponsive to speech so they
appear to be deaf. To the - child, speech is perceived as if someone was
literally saying (blah blah blah) - This deficit impairs speech and language from
being processed. This in turn - impairs learning because the child can not
discriminate speech sounds. This can - also create difficulty for the child to express
his or her wants and needs. - Difficulty processing language causes the child
to have problems with word - finding as well.
(Heron et al., 1998) (Chapman et al.,1998)
5How Verbal Auditory Agnosia Affects Communication
(cont.)
Some children have an echoing effect in their
perception of speech. This interferes with the
further speech that follows. The echo can occur
in the form of speech, sounds, words, or whole
sentences. The echo can last as long as 10
minutes. Some children may have a high-pitch
voice with abnormal inflection similar to that of
children who are deaf (Chapman, McCathren,
Stomont, 1998, p. 40). Articulation problems can
also form
6Age of Onset
- The critical time period for development of
speech and language is from one to eight years of
age. - If the child develops verbal auditory agnosia
between the ages of one and eight than speech and
language are at risk for not developing properly. - The age of onset is important because it
determines both the severity and the long-term
outcome. - The earlier the onset the more severe the
impairments of speech and language will be. In
severe forms the child can become mute. - The age when the child develops this disorder is
critical for determining the degree of language
that is lost. The later the onset the greater the
outcome for speech to be restored. - (Chapman et al., 1998) (Van Slyke, 2002)
7Role of a Speech-Language Pathologist
- A childs education is dependent on the language
recovery, which is one reason why speech and
language therapy is critical. - A speech-language pathologist will help the child
acquire an effective way to communicate, which is
usually through the use of visual forms of
language. This would include a combination of
augmenting speech with - sign language facial
expressions - reading
pictures - writing
sound discrimination - Training the auditory system will enhance and
improve receptive and - expressive forms of language.
- (Braem, Metz-Lutz, Morel, Perez, Prelaz,
Rickli, 2001) - (Chapman et al. 1998)
-
-
8References
- Braem, P.B., Metz-Lutz, M., Morel, B., Perez, E.
R., Prelaz, A. et al. (2001). Sign language in
childhood epileptic aphasia (Landau-Kleffner
syndrome). Developmental Medicine Child
Neurology, 43, 739-744. Retrieved February 20,
2005, from PsycINFO database. - Chapman, T., McCathren, K., Stomont, M. (2001).
What every educator should know about
Landau-Kleffner syndrome. Focus on Autism and
Other Developmental Disabilities, 13, 39-44.
Retrieved February 19, 2005, from ERIC database. - Heron, C., Macfarlane, S., Papathansiou, I.
(1998). International Journal of Language
Communication Disorders, 33, 214-217. Retrieved
February 13, 2005, from Academic Search Premier
database. - Van Slyke, P. A. (2002). Classroom instruction
for children with Landau-Kleffner syndrome. Child
Language Teaching Therapy, 18, 23. Retrieved
February 19, 2005 from Communication Mass Media
Complete database.