Trials / Active Not Recruiting
Active Not RecruitingNCT03623100
Neural Indices of Intervention Outcomes in Children With Speech Sound Disorders
Identification of Electrophysiological Indices of Speech Sound Perception and Change in Children With Speech Sound Disorders
- Status
- Active Not Recruiting
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 42 (actual)
- Sponsor
- Idaho State University · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 4 Years – 6 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Accepted
Summary
Children with speech sound disorders (SSD) are thought to be unable to detect subtle differences between sounds, though there is little understanding of the underlying perceptual mechanisms implicated in SSD. The investigators suggest that children with SSD may have difficulty creating phonological representations due to inaccurate perception and representation of speech sounds, which then directly impacts speech production abilities. Children will be randomly assigned to one of two treatment conditions in the present study: 1) Traditional speech treatment alone or 2) Traditional speech treatment in conjunction with speech perceptual training. By identifying an underlying mechanism of the disorder, the clinical approach to the treatment of SSD will be better informed and treatment approaches targeting all deficient areas can be utilized.
Detailed description
Five to eight percent of all children in the United States have a speech sound disorder (SSD). Children with SSD have difficulty producing sounds of their target language system. Some of these children also have difficulty perceiving and categorizing speech sounds. It is presently unknown what underlying mechanisms might account for the communication problems children with SSD encounter. One possible explanation is that children with SSD cannot produce speech sounds correctly because they have poorly specified phonological representations, which are the result of inaccurate speech sound perception. Thus, speech sound production errors may stem from imprecise speech perception and its resulting sparse phonological representations. Most children with SSD make slow and steady gains in speech treatment. This is likely due to the fact that speech treatment typically targets just phonetics (i.e., speech production) and phonology (i.e., speech sound knowledge and use). However, it is possible that the underlying mechanisms of speech sound disorders are not specifically phonological in nature but may in fact be related to more general cognitive and/or linguistic impairments. Thus, children will be randomly assigned to one of two treatment conditions in the present study: 1) Traditional speech treatment alone or 2) Traditional speech treatment in conjunction with speech perceptual training. One goal of the research program is to identify what components of treatment induce the greatest amount of phonological change in children with SSD. By comparing the treatment components, the investigators will be able to identify what treatment activities induce the greatest phonological change in children. This information should aid in developing more efficient and effective treatment programs for SSD. A second goal of the research program to use electrophysiological measures (electroencephalogram, EEG; event-related potentials, ERP; frequency following responses, FFR) to examine how phonological representations and their associated auditory neural responses change in conjunction with the two traditional speech treatment approaches. A better understanding of phonological representations and the auditory sensory system in children with SSD will inform how speech evaluations and treatment are best conducted by speech-language pathologists.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| BEHAVIORAL | Speech Production Treatment. | Speech production treatment will be delivered in two phases: Imitation and Spontaneous Production. Treatment will be provided two times weekly in 1-hour sessions, for up to 19 sessions. Every child's intervention program will target a single phoneme that was excluded from his or her phonemic inventory. Each treatment phoneme will be targeted through the production of five words that will be initially introduced to the child using a storybook reading format. Imitation treatment will continue until a child maintains 75% accurate production of the treated phoneme over two consecutive sessions (i.e. performance-based criterion) or until seven consecutive sessions are completed (i.e. time-based criterion). Spontaneous Production will continue until the child maintains either a performance-based criterion of 90% accurate production of the treated phoneme over 3 consecutive sessions, or a time-based criterion of 12 consecutive sessions. |
| BEHAVIORAL | Speech Production + Speech Perception Treatment. | This speech treatment condition will be administered in the same way as the Speech Production treatment. The difference in conditions will be that speech treatment in this condition will last for 50 minutes rather than 60 minutes. The remaining 10 minutes of each session will involve the speech perception training. These speech perception tasks will involve previously recorded word-level productions focusing on the same phoneme that is addressed in speech production treatment in word-initial position. A variety of words produced correctly and incorrectly by adults and children will be presented in pairs and the children will have to determine if the words contain the same word-initial phoneme or two different phonemes. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2014-08-01
- Primary completion
- 2024-07-31
- Completion
- 2026-07-31
- First posted
- 2018-08-09
- Last updated
- 2025-05-09
Locations
1 site across 1 country: United States
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03623100. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.