Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT06578416

The Development of Stuttering in Young Children

Developmental Trajectories to Stuttering Persistence and Recovery

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
120 (estimated)
Sponsor
Michigan State University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
3 Years – 6 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The goal of this longitudinal research is to learn why some children "grow out" of stuttering, while others persist. Children who do and do not stutter aged 3-6 years are eligible to participate in our study. During the study, children's speech and language abilities will be assessed with standardized assessments, and they complete several child-friendly experiments. During these experiments, brain activity will be recorded using specialized caps while children describe pictures, children will speak in two virtual-reality scenarios, and produce speech while keeping to a beat.

Detailed description

The length of participation in our study depends on the subset of activities completed. Families in the longitudinal study will take part in three visits each lasting approximately 2 hrs for up to 5 years. Parents and caregivers will complete parent questionnaires (1 x each year for up to 5 years) and a 5-minute, online survey in between visits to the lab (1x each year for up to 5 years). Children will take part in standardized and observational assessments (1x each year for up to 5 years). These may cover aspects of social/emotional development, cognition, and speech, language, and hearing abilities. These tests are used to assess whether a child falls within or outside of the normative range for his/her age. Children will participate in one or more of the following tasks (1x each year for up to 5 years) * Listen to sounds or words and view or name pictures presented on a monitor. Brain activity electroencephalography (EEG) will be recorded while children listen to speech sounds and name pictures. This will be done with an elastic cap that holds special sensors (electrodes). Sensors will also be placed behind each ear, beside each eye, and under the left eye. * Virtual reality (VR). Children wear a VR headset and experience virtual, age-appropriate talking situations (e.g., answering questions in a classroom). While they talk in these scenarios, the headset measures where they are looking (eye tracking), and sensors on their forehead, hand, and finger measure their heart rate and sweat response. * Children will watch cartoons of animals jumping to a consistent beat (rhythm) and produce a word in time with the animal jumping/beat. * Children will repeat nonwords, name pictures, or count while wearing a cap with sensors. Half of the sensors emit light through while the other half measures the reflected light. These sensors give us information about brain activity and are not harmful.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTStandardized assessments of speech and language abilitiesStandardized and observational assessment of speech and language abilities

Timeline

Start date
2023-06-01
Primary completion
2027-06-01
Completion
2027-06-01
First posted
2024-08-29
Last updated
2026-04-16

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06578416. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.