Walker, Letitia J.Givens, Gregg D.Stuart, AndrewElangovan, Saravanan2008-07-252009-08-072011-05-172008-07-252009-08-072011-05-172006The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America; 119:4 p. 1946-1949http://hdl.handle.net/10342/1091The purpose of this study was to examine temporal resolution in normal hearing pre-school children. Word recognition was evaluated in quiet and in spectrally identical continuous and interrupted noise at signal-to-noise ratios (S/Ns) of 10, 0, and -10 dB. Sixteen children four to five years of age and eight adults participated. Performance decreased with decreasing S/N. At poorer S/Ns, participants demonstrated superior performance or a release from masking in the interrupted noise. Adults performed better than children, yet, the release from masking was equivalent. Collectively these findings are consistent with the notion that preschool children suffer from poorer processing efficiency rather than temporal resolution per se.19 p. : ill.enChild, PreschoolHearingAcoustic StimulationAuditory Temporal Resolution In Normal Hearing Preschool Children Revealed by Word Recognition In Continuous And Interrupted NoiseTemporal Resolution In Preschool ChildrenArticle10.1121/1.2178700