I. Wolfram’s research while affiliated with Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität in Munich and other places

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Publications (2)


[Early auditory evoked potentials in children with language development disorders]
  • Article

September 1996

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3 Reads

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6 Citations

Klinische Pädiatrie

W von Suchodoletz

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I Wolfram

One of the prerequisites for normal language development is a highly sensitive auditory perception. An auditory perception deficit is therefore likely to affect the normal course of language acquisition. To test this hypothesis, we studied the BAEPs in 25 preschool boys with an expressive developmental language disorder and 12 boys with a history of stuttering. These children had no hearing disorders. Comparisons with the control group (49 neurologically healthy male subjects with normal hearing) revealed a statistically significant delay of waves III, IV and V in the language impaired subjects, whereas no significant differences were detected in the group of stutterers. Our findings suggest that a delayed or altered conduction of acoustic stimuli is important to the pathogenesis of developmental language disorders.


Brainstem auditory evoked potentials (BAEP) in children with developmental language disorders

January 1996

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14 Reads

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5 Citations

One of the prerequisites for normal language development is a highly sensitive auditory perception. An auditory perception deficit is therefore likely to affect the normal course of language acquisition. To test this hypothesis, we studied the BAEPs in 25 preschool boys with an expressive developmental language disorder and 12 boys with a history of stuttering. These children had no hearing disorders. Comparisons with the control group (49 neurologically healthy male subjects with normal hearing) revealed a statistically significant delay of waves III, IV and V in the language impaired subjects, whereas no significant differences were detected in the group of stutterers. Our findings suggest that a delayed or altered conduction of acoustic stimuli is important to the pathogenesis of developmental language disorders.

Citations (1)


... In opposition, other authors have reported normal latencies of clickevoked ABR in stuttering children. [31] The results of our study show that the brainstem auditory response to transient stimuli is less synchronous in stuttering subjects compared to norms. Some of the individual differences among studies may be attributed to different methodology and pathological diversity of stuttering. ...

Reference:

Assessment of the Binaural Interaction Component of the Auditory Brain Stem Response in Children with Stuttering
[Early auditory evoked potentials in children with language development disorders]
  • Citing Article
  • September 1996

Klinische Pädiatrie