Elsevier

Brain and Language

Volume 4, Issue 3, July 1977, Pages 396-402
Brain and Language

A human sound transducer/reproducer: Temporal capabilities of a profoundly echolalic child

https://doi.org/10.1016/0093-934X(77)90034-7Get rights and content

Abstract

Stimulus-echo latencies of a blind, severely echolalic child were measured to assess the capabilities of spontaneous transduction/reproduction of a verbal signal. Mean offset-to-onset latencies of 270 msec and onset-to-onset latencies of 792 msec are comparable to laboratory reaction times for syllable imitation. Results are considered within the theoretical context of physiological speech, i.e., externalized exposure of a psittacine level of verbal processing divorced from semantic, syntactic, lexical and, quite probably, phonological interference.

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