Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Vol.29 332-347 September 1986.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Analytic Study of the Tadoma Method

Language Abilities of Three Deaf-Blind Subjects

Carol Chomsky 1
1 Harvard Graduate School of Education, Cambridge, MA

This study reports on the linguistic abilities of 3 adult deaf-blind subjects. The subjects perceive spoken language through touch, placing a hand on the face of the speaker and monitoring the speaker's articulatory motions, a method of speechreading known as Tadoma. Two of the subjects, deaf-blind since infancy, acquired language and learned to speak through this tactile system; the third subject has used Tadoma since becoming deaf-blind at age 7. Linguistic knowledge and productive language are analyzed, using standardized tests and several tests constructed for this study. The subjects' language abilities prove to be extensive, comparing favorably in many areas with hearing individuals. The results illustrate a relatively minor effect of limited language exposure on eventual language achievement. The results also demonstrate the adequacy of the tactile sense, in these highly trained Tadoma users, for transmitting information about spoken language sufficient to support the development of language and learning to produce speech.

Submitted on August 12, 1985
Accepted on January 27, 1986


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