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. 2020 Dec 22;42(4):1024–1033. doi: 10.1097/AUD.0000000000000994

TABLE 1.

Characteristics of the participants

Characteristic DHH TH P
N 60 71
Age, yr (SD) 6.32 (2.08) 6.07 (1.75) t(129) = −0.74, p = 0.458
Girls, n (%) 30 (50%) 41 (58%) χ2(1, N = 131) = 0.79, p = 0.375
Nonverbal intelligence (SD)* 9.51 (2.67) 10.31 (2.61) t(121) = 1.66, p = 0.099
Parental education level (SD) 3.31 (1.03) 3.58 (0.96) t(121) = 1.47, p = 0.143
Age at amplification, yr (SD) 2.51 (1.29)
Duration of amplification, yr (SD) 3.81 (1.87)
Degree of hearing loss, n (%)
 Mild (26–40 dB) 2 (3%)
 Moderate (41–60 dB) 2 (3%)
 Severe (60–80 dB) 1 (2%)
 Profound (> 80 dB) 55 (92%)
Type of amplification, n (%)
 Unilateral cochlear implant 40 (67%)
 Bilateral cochlear implants 15 (25%)
 Hearing aid only 5 (8%)
Etiology, n (%)
 Congenital 29 (48%)
 Inner ear anomaly 14 (23%)
 Waardenburg syndrome 1 (2%)
 Auditory neuropathy 2 (3%)
 Unknown 14 (23%)
Type of education, n (%)
 Regular schools 57 (95%)
 Special schools 3 (5%)

DHH indicates deaf and hard-of-hearing; TH, typically hearing.

*

For nonverbal intelligence, age-corrected norm scores are presented. The grand population mean is 10 and the SD is 3. Children 3 to 5 years old were tested with Block Design and Matrix subscales of the Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence Revised Edition (Wechsler 1989). Children 6 to 10 years of age were tested with Block Design and Picture Arrangement subscales of the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children Third Edition (Wechsler 1991). These tests were used because the experimenter had access to them and had received training to administer these versions.

Parental education level: 1 = no/primary education; 2 = lower general secondary education; 3 = higher general secondary education; and 4 = college/university.