Age-related Correlates of Treatment for Late-acquired Sounds
Status: | Recruiting |
---|---|
Conditions: | Cognitive Studies |
Therapuetic Areas: | Psychiatry / Psychology |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | 4 - 8 |
Updated: | 9/12/2018 |
Start Date: | June 11, 2018 |
End Date: | May 2020 |
Age-related Correlates of Treatment Efficacy and Efficiency for Late-acquired Sounds
Late-acquired sounds, such as /r/ are difficult to learn and many children experience
persistent errors on these sounds. The purpose of the present study is to determine whether
treating these sounds earlier in the child's life may result in better outcomes.
persistent errors on these sounds. The purpose of the present study is to determine whether
treating these sounds earlier in the child's life may result in better outcomes.
Late-acquired sounds, such as /r/ are difficult to learn and many children experience
persistent errors on these sounds. However, these sounds are often treated later in a child's
life because they are not expected to be fully acquired until quite late--age 7-8 for some
sounds. This practice places treatment in a time of the child's development in which they
struggle to learn new sounds.The purpose of the present study is to determine whether
treating these sounds earlier in the child's life may result in better outcomes, and to
examine treatment efficacy and efficiency for two methods of treatment.
persistent errors on these sounds. However, these sounds are often treated later in a child's
life because they are not expected to be fully acquired until quite late--age 7-8 for some
sounds. This practice places treatment in a time of the child's development in which they
struggle to learn new sounds.The purpose of the present study is to determine whether
treating these sounds earlier in the child's life may result in better outcomes, and to
examine treatment efficacy and efficiency for two methods of treatment.
Inclusionary Criteria:
- Normal Hearing
- Typical Receptive Language
- Speech Sound Disorder
- No motor speech impairment
- Typical non-verbal intelligence
- Produces at least one late-acquired sound with <7% accuracy
- Monolingual English-speaking
- Typical in terms of motoric and neurological development
Exclusionary Criteria:
- Neurological disorder
- Hearing loss
- Nonverbal IQ < 16th percentile
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