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Auditory-Motor Mapping Training in a More Verbal Child with Autism

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2017

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Frontiers Media S.A.
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Chenausky, Karen V., Andrea C. Norton, and Gottfried Schlaug. 2017. “Auditory-Motor Mapping Training in a More Verbal Child with Autism.” Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 11 (1): 426. doi:10.3389/fnhum.2017.00426. http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2017.00426.

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Abstract

We tested the effect of Auditory-Motor Mapping Training (AMMT), a novel, intonation-based treatment for spoken language originally developed for minimally verbal (MV) children with autism, on a more-verbal child with autism. We compared this child’s performance after 25 therapy sessions with that of: (1) a child matched on age, autism severity, and expressive language level who received 25 sessions of a non-intonation-based control treatment Speech Repetition Therapy (SRT); and (2) a matched pair of MV children (one of whom received AMMT; the other, SRT). We found a significant Time × Treatment effect in favor of AMMT for number of Syllables Correct and Consonants Correct per stimulus for both pairs of children, as well as a significant Time × Treatment effect in favor of AMMT for number of Vowels Correct per stimulus for the more-verbal pair. Magnitudes of the difference in post-treatment performance between AMMT and SRT, adjusted for Baseline differences, were: (a) larger for the more-verbal pair than for the MV pair; and (b) associated with very large effect sizes (Cohen’s d > 1.3) in the more-verbal pair. Results hold promise for the efficacy of AMMT for improving spoken language production in more-verbal children with autism as well as their MV peers and suggest hypotheses about brain function that are testable in both correlational and causal behavioral-imaging studies.

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autism, speech therapy, intonation, AMMT, minimally verbal, speech development

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