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General Parenting
Two sets of test results in. Definitely the same pattern, but more pronounced
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<blockquote data-quote="TerryJ2" data-source="post: 548224" data-attributes="member: 3419"><p>I found this online: Auditory processing disorder can be developmental or acquired. It may result from ear infections, head injuries or neurodevelopmental delays that affect processing of auditory information. This can include problems with: "...sound localization and lateralization (see also binaural fusion); auditory discrimination; auditory pattern recognition; temporal aspects of audition, including temporal integration, temporal discrimination (e.g., temporal gap detection), temporal ordering, and temporal masking; auditory performance in competing acoustic signals (including dichotic listening); and auditory performance with degraded acoustic signals.</p><p></p><p>... as well as a note that kids who have attention problems are not included in this category. I have no idea why.</p><p>Also, my son has had 13 ear infections (age 11 mo's to 5 yrs). Is that a cause or effect?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TerryJ2, post: 548224, member: 3419"] I found this online: Auditory processing disorder can be developmental or acquired. It may result from ear infections, head injuries or neurodevelopmental delays that affect processing of auditory information. This can include problems with: "...sound localization and lateralization (see also binaural fusion); auditory discrimination; auditory pattern recognition; temporal aspects of audition, including temporal integration, temporal discrimination (e.g., temporal gap detection), temporal ordering, and temporal masking; auditory performance in competing acoustic signals (including dichotic listening); and auditory performance with degraded acoustic signals. ... as well as a note that kids who have attention problems are not included in this category. I have no idea why. Also, my son has had 13 ear infections (age 11 mo's to 5 yrs). Is that a cause or effect? [/QUOTE]
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Two sets of test results in. Definitely the same pattern, but more pronounced
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