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The Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education 2004 9(4):395-412; doi:10.1093/deafed/enh033
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© 2004 Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education vol. 9 no. 4 © Oxford University Press 2004; all rights reserved.

Empirical Articles

Individual Differences in Language Performance after Cochlear Implantation at One to Three Years of Age: Child, Family, and Linguistic Factors

Patricia E. Spencer

Gallaudet University

Language skills were investigated in a multicultural sample of 13 prelingually deaf children (11 profoundly deaf from birth) who received cochlear implants between 14 and 38 months of age; average duration of implant use was 49 months. Individual postimplant language skills ranged from extremely delayed to age appropriate. On average, skills varied across domains: on vocabulary, several children functioned in the average range compared with hearing peers, but all were below that range on a test emphasizing syntax (CELF-P). Children with preimplant hearing experience had the highest scores on all language measures. Excluding these children, age of implantation (range 14 to 27 months) associated inversely and significantly with CELF-P scores, even when nonverbal IQ was controlled. Qualitative analyses indicated higher child language achievement associated with parents' reports of lengthy, in-depth processes to decide about cochlear implantation. Such reports may indicate high levels of ongoing parent involvement with child and programming.

All correspondence should be sent to Patricia E. Spencer, 31 Flamingo Rd., Rockport, TX 78382 (e-mail: patspencer3{at}juno.com).

Received January 26, 2004; revised March 9, 2004; accepted March 11, 2004


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