Vocabulary Intervention for Late Talkers

NCT ID: NCT03379818

Last Updated: 2024-09-19

Study Results

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Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

TERMINATED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

30 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2018-06-19

Study Completion Date

2021-07-30

Brief Summary

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Most studies regarding word learning have focused on understanding when and how infants learn words. At 24 months, typically developing infants know between 200 and 300 words and add new words to their vocabularies at a rapid rate. It is also during the first years of life that some principles that promote vocabulary learning are developed. The shape bias, which is a tendency to infer that objects that share the same shape will also share the same name, is the one that has been studied the most. At 24 months, typically developing infants use this principle as a strategy to learn novel words. In contrast, Late Talkers (children with a language delay in the absence of a physiological, cognitive or genetic disorder that may account for this delay) do not exhibit this preference. It has been found that teaching typically developing infants a shape bias prior to the end of the second year of life can boosts their word learning. Despite this, the possibility of teaching Late Talkers this principle and its effect on their vocabulary and language development has not been explored.

Over a series of 9 weekly sessions, Late Talkers (diagnosed by Language Therapists from the Birmingham Community Healthcare National Health Services Foundation Trust, United Kingdom) will be introduced to one of two possible interventions: a shape bias intervention and a more conventional intervention called "specific word intervention". Both interventions will be compared after 9 weeks. One year later, a follow up study will be conducted to assess the long-term effects each intervention has in word learning. Participants will be referred by a Speech and Language Therapists from the Birmingham Community Healthcare National Health Services Foundation Trust, United Kingdom, and all assessments and interventions will take place at the Infant and Child Lab at the University of Birmingham, United Kingdom.

Detailed Description

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The objectives of the present study are:

A. To investigate whether it is possible to teach Late Talkers to attend to objects' shapes as a useful property for learning and generalizing novel object labels.

B. To assess the benefits that this intervention programme has on Late Talkers' short-term vocabulary development compared to an intervention where infants will be taught specific words ('specific word' intervention).

C. Assess whether the success of teaching Late Talkers a shape bias for noun extension is related to their sensitivity to object shape similarities.

D. Assess whether the success of teaching Late Talkers a shape bias for noun extension is related to their ability of sustain their attention to novel objects that are presented to them.

E. To assess the benefits of the intervention programme on language and cognitive development one year after the intervention compared to the 'specific word' intervention

Conditions

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Language Delay Language Development Disorders

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Over a series of 9 weekly sessions, children diagnosed as Late Talkers will be assessed in different tasks that can be divided into 5 phases: Vocabulary and developmental assessments, initial cognitive assessments, training sessions, word learning test 1, and word learning test 2. Each group (shape training group and specific word training group) will receive a different training programme, however the other assessments will be identical across the groups. In the shape training group, participants will be taught to attend to shape when learning and extending novel labels. In the specific word training group, participants will be taught specific words that they do not know. Before and after the intervention, participants vocabulary will be assessed to compare which intervention enhances word learning. One year later, all participants will be assessed with a language test and a cognitive test. The same assessments will be used in both groups.
Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

SINGLE

Participants
Participants will be randomly assigned to one of two possible groups. In both groups, they will receive an intervention, however participants and their parents will not know which one. At the end of the study, participants and their parents will be informed about which group they were in and a document containing a detailed description of each intervention will be provided to them.

Study Groups

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Specific word 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.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Specific word training

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

In this intervention, participants will be taught the names of 28 real objects. The target words have been selected from the "Wordbank database", which is an open database that lists the proportion of children that know a specific word at a specific age. Twenty-eight words that are understood by 80% of the total child population at 25 months were randomly selected as target words. Techniques such as focused stimulation and modelling target words, which have proved to be useful for word learning, will be used.

Shape training intervention

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.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Shape training intervention

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

This intervention is based on on a study conducted by Smith and colleagues (2002), where they found that teaching typically developing infants to attend to shape by the end of the second year of life significantly enhances their word learning. Participants will be taught that the significant property they should focus in when learning and extending novel labels is shape. This will be done through play-like sessions.

Interventions

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Shape training intervention

This intervention is based on on a study conducted by Smith and colleagues (2002), where they found that teaching typically developing infants to attend to shape by the end of the second year of life significantly enhances their word learning. Participants will be taught that the significant property they should focus in when learning and extending novel labels is shape. This will be done through play-like sessions.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Specific word training

In this intervention, participants will be taught the names of 28 real objects. The target words have been selected from the "Wordbank database", which is an open database that lists the proportion of children that know a specific word at a specific age. Twenty-eight words that are understood by 80% of the total child population at 25 months were randomly selected as target words. Techniques such as focused stimulation and modelling target words, which have proved to be useful for word learning, will be used.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Eligibility Criteria

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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.
Minimum Eligible Age

24 Months

Maximum Eligible Age

48 Months

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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National Council of Science and Technology, Mexico

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

University of Birmingham

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Andrea Krott

Dr

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Andrea Krott, Dr

Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR

University of Birmingham

Claudia Zuniga-Montanez

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

University of Birmingham

Locations

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Infant and Child Laboratory, University of Birmingham

Edgbaston, Birmingham, United Kingdom

Site Status

Countries

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United Kingdom

Provided Documents

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Document Type: Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan

View Document

Other Identifiers

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RG_17-142

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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