| Literature DB >> 21980480 |
Catherine Y Wan1, Loes Bazen, Rebecca Baars, Amanda Libenson, Lauryn Zipse, Jennifer Zuk, Andrea Norton, Gottfried Schlaug.
Abstract
Although up to 25% of children with autism are non-verbal, there are very few interventions that can reliably produce significant improvements in speech output. Recently, a novel intervention called Auditory-Motor Mapping Training (AMMT) has been developed, which aims to promote speech production directly by training the association between sounds and articulatory actions using intonation and bimanual motor activities. AMMT capitalizes on the inherent musical strengths of children with autism, and offers activities that they intrinsically enjoy. It also engages and potentially stimulates a network of brain regions that may be dysfunctional in autism. Here, we report an initial efficacy study to provide 'proof of concept' for AMMT. Six non-verbal children with autism participated. Prior to treatment, the children had no intelligible words. They each received 40 individual sessions of AMMT 5 times per week, over an 8-week period. Probe assessments were conducted periodically during baseline, therapy, and follow-up sessions. After therapy, all children showed significant improvements in their ability to articulate words and phrases, with generalization to items that were not practiced during therapy sessions. Because these children had no or minimal vocal output prior to treatment, the acquisition of speech sounds and word approximations through AMMT represents a critical step in expressive language development in children with autism.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21980480 PMCID: PMC3183050 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0025505
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Participant characteristics.
| Child | Gender | Age (yr∶mth) | Diagnosis | Examples of volitional vocal output at baseline | Frequency of speech therapy | Nature of speech therapy |
| 1 | M | 5∶9 | Autism (DSM-IV, CARS) | /ba/, /heh/, /coo/, /leh/ | 5×/wk at 30 min since age 3 | PECS |
| 2 | M | 6∶0 | Autism (DSM-IV, CARS) | whispered /h/, /k/, /b/ | 3×/wk at 30 min since age 3 | PECS, AAC |
| 3 | M | 6∶0 | Autism (DSM-IV, CARS) | /muh/, /aw/, /p/ | 2×/wk at 30 min since age 4 | PECS, gestures |
| 4 | F | 6∶3 | Autism (DSM-IV, CARS) | /m/, /guh/, /E/ | 2×/wk at 30 min since age 3.5 | PECS, articulation |
| 5 | M | 6∶9 | Autism (DSM-IV, CARS) | /buh/, /guh/, /puh/ | 4×/wk at 45 min since age 3 | PECS, AAC device, video modeling, articulation |
| 6 | M | 8∶9 | Autism (DSM-IV, CARS) | whispered /b/ | 2×/wk at 30 min since age 3 | PECS, signs, gestures |
PECS = Picture Exchange Communication System.
AAC = Augmentative and alternative communication.
Figure 1An illustration of an AMMT trial.
Therapist guiding a child in the unison production of a target word while tapping the electronic drum pads.
Structure of an AMMT trial.
| Step | Procedure |
|
| Therapist introduces the target phrase by showing a picture and then intoning (singing) the phrase at a rate of one syllable per second. “More please”. |
|
| Therapist and child intone the target phrase together. Therapist intones “Let's sing it together” and in unison with child “more please”. |
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| Therapist and child begin to intone the target phrase together, but halfway through, the therapist fades out while the child continues to sing the rest of the phrase. “More ________”. |
|
| Therapist intones and taps the target phrase while the child listens. The child immediately repeats the phrase. “My turn: more please. Your turn: _______”. |
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| The child produces the target phase on his/her own one more time. “__________” |
To illustrate the steps, the target phrase here is “more please.”
Figure 2Graphs of each participant's CV production across the baseline, treatment, and follow-up probe sessions.
Percentage of correctly produced target words before and after 40 sessions of AMMT.
| Child | Before therapy | After therapy |
| 1 | 0% | 71% |
| 2 | 0% | 8% |
| 3 | 0% | 21% |
| 4 | 0% | 29% |
| 5 | 0% | 21% |
| 6 | 0% | 26% |