Vocabulary Intervention for Late Talkers
Language Delay, Language Development Disorders
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Language Delay focused on measuring Shape bias, Late Talkers
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Children (boys and girls) between 24 and 48 months.
- Children from Birmingham (United Kingdom) and its surrounding areas.
- Monolingual English native speakers
- Children with a moderate or severe language delay, as diagnosed by a Speech and Language Therapist of the Birmingham Community Healthcare National Health Service Foundation Trust, United Kingdom.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Children with a developmental, physiological, neurological or cognitive disorder that could explain their language delay.
- Children with a mild language delay, as diagnosed by a Speech and Language Therapist of the Birmingham Community Healthcare National Health Service Foundation Trust, United Kingdom.
- Children that speak or know another language different than English, either as first or additional language.
Sites / Locations
- Infant and Child Laboratory, University of Birmingham
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Experimental
Specific word training intervention
Shape training intervention
This training programme will be similar to a typical word learning intervention. Infants will be introduced to 28 real objects and their names (e.g. biscuit, trousers). These objects will be divided into 7 sets of four words, and during each session, infants will be presented with one of this sets. Each session will consist of a 15 min play session in which each object will be presented at least 10 times and each object name will be mentioned at least 10 times. Additionally, techniques such as focused stimulation and modelling target words, which have proved to be useful for word learning, will be used.
In the shape training intervention, infants will be presented with four novel words paired with four novel sets of objects. Each set consists of two exemplars with the same shape but with different colors and textures, and a contrasting object. Each set will be presented in a play session, and the name of the objects will be mentioned at least 10 times. The other three sets of exemplars will be presented in the same way. Each session will last 15 minutes. This intervention is based on a study conducted by Smith and colleagues (2002), where they found that typically developing infants that are taught to attend to shape at 17 months old, can enhance significantly their word learning.