Clinical Trials Logo

Language Development Disorders clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Language Development Disorders.

Filter by:

NCT ID: NCT04066049 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Language Development Disorders

EMT en Español for Spanish-speaking Toddlers With Language Delays

Start date: December 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of the study is to conduct an initial efficacy study of a promising therapist and caregiver-implemented communication intervention to improve language and school readiness skills in low-income Spanish-speaking children with receptive and expressive language delays (ages 30 to 36 months). The proposed randomized trial compares the effects of a caregiver plus therapist implemented EMT en Español intervention to a community based "business as usual" control group at four time points (pre- intervention, post-intervention, 6 month follow-up, 12 month follow-up) in a sample of 84 low-income, Spanish-speaking families and their toddlers with receptive and expressive language delays.

NCT ID: NCT03977701 Completed - Clinical trials for Speech Sound Disorder

Manipulating Linguistic Complexity to Improve Child Language Treatment Outcomes

Start date: June 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Phonological disorder (PD) and specific language impairment (SLI) directly impact a child's ability to communicate and are among the most prevalent developmental disorders. The proposed experiments manipulate the complexity of treatment targets to identify the most efficacious treatment approaches for English- and Spanish-speaking children aged 3 to 6 years who present with these disorders. This research will reveal the nature of interactions between sound and structure in language for these children and will have significant implications for a unique approach to target selection when treating persistent phonological and grammatical difficulties in children with PD, SLI, or both.

NCT ID: NCT03966183 Completed - Clinical trials for Unilateral Vocal Cord Paralysis

Early UVFP Management Based on Neurological Evidences (ION-UVFP) - Preliminary Study

Start date: June 15, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

The purpose of this preliminary study is to help clarify our hypotheses for the longitudinal study by investigating the relationship between vocal cord paralysis and central auditory processes and thus the interpretation of auditory inputs into the central nervous system.

NCT ID: NCT03782493 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Developmental Language Disorder

Maximizing Outcomes for Preschoolers With Developmental Language Disorders

Start date: April 4, 2019
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The objective of the proposed study is to evaluate the efficacy of the Enhanced Milieu Teaching-Sentence Focus (EMT-SF) intervention, implemented by caregivers and interventionists, relative to a control condition enrolling 108 30-month-old children and their caregivers. The central hypothesis is that intervention will result in better overall child language skills at 49 months of age.

NCT ID: NCT03688386 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Language Development

A Language Intervention Study of Preterm Infants

Start date: December 4, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a randomized controlled trial to study a reading intervention in the NICU among preterm infants using LENA (Language Environment Analysis) recordings, linguistic feedback, and a language curriculum to improve the neonatal inpatient language environment and language outcomes for preterm infants.

NCT ID: NCT03663972 Completed - Speech Disorders Clinical Trials

Age-related Correlates of Treatment for Late-acquired Sounds

ARC
Start date: June 11, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

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.

NCT ID: NCT03609502 Suspended - Clinical trials for Language Development Disorders

Perceptual Learning and Memory Consolidation in Adults With and Without LI

Start date: August 1, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study tests a memory-based account of atypical speech perception in adults with language-based learning disability (also known as developmental language impairment [LI]). One perspective regarding the its etiology considers impoverished speech sound representations to be central to the linguistic symptoms observed in LI. This project examines a potential abnormality in the process of building speech sound representations in LI. Previous work by the PI has found that sleep is important for learning speech sounds. Furthermore, different measures of speech perception (identification and discrimination), reveal distinct patterns of learning that are consistent with that of declarative and procedural memory consolidation. A division of labor by declarative and procedural memory systems in the building of speech representations may imply that problems with phonology may stem from selective weaknesses in declarative or procedural memory in predictive ways. The first project Aim is to identify the memory substrates of novel phonetic category formation. In Experiment 1, the investigators will obtain behavioral measures of declarative, procedural, and speech sound learning before and after post-training sleep in 40 typical adults and 20 adults with LI. Among typical adults, a double dissociation is predicted in which speech identification will be predicted by individual differences in declarative memory, and speech discrimination will be predicted by individual differences in procedural memory. Moreover, adults with LI are predicted to demonstrate consolidation deficits across memory types. The second project Aim is to identify the neural substrates of phonetic category formation. In Experiment 2, the investigators will obtain functional magnetic resonance (fMRI) recordings of 20 TD and 20 LI adults performing post-training identification and discrimination tasks on a trained speech contrast before and after sleep. In typical adults, a Time by Speech-task interaction is predicted. Speech identification will recruit episodic (hippocampal) information on Day 1 relative to classic regions for phonological processing on Day 2. Speech discrimination will result in a change in magnitude of activation from Days 1 and 2 in the left inferior frontal gyrus (IFG), reflecting an overnight decrease in effort. LI (n=20) is predicted to demonstrate reduced overnight change in neural activation relative to TD in both tasks.

NCT ID: NCT03586479 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Language Development Disorders

Kindergarten Children Acquiring Words Through Storybook Reading

KAWStory
Start date: July 2, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Children with Specific Language Impairment (SLI) are slower to learn new words than their peers, placing them at risk for academic failure. In this study, we are improving a storybook reading treatment to help Kindergarten children with SLI learn new words. In this study, we compare three versions of book reading that vary in how often children are tested on, meaning asked to talk about, the words they are learning in the book: low vs. mid vs. high testing. We then examine which version of the treatment leads to better learning of the words during treatment and remembering of the words after treatment. We also seek to understand individual differences in treatment outcomes by examining pre-treatment predictors as well as progress during and after treatment.

NCT ID: NCT03547492 Completed - Adolescent Behavior Clinical Trials

Developmental Intervention for Infants of Adolescent Mothers

Start date: January 25, 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a randomized control trial to evaluate a simple language intervention curriculum that utilizes LENA recordings, linguistic feedback and text-message review of content to improve language environments and outcomes for infants with adolescent mothers.

NCT ID: NCT03525951 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Autism Spectrum Disorder

Parent-Level Predictors of Early Language Interaction Quality and Intervention Outcomes

Start date: March 22, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Children with poor early language skills are at risk for academic, social, vocational, and health difficulties across the lifespan. Parent training-as part of early language intervention-is a cost-effective option to address this public health issue, but these interventions demonstrate large individual differences in outcomes and barriers to scalability. The purpose of this research is to examine parent-level predictors of early language interaction quality and modifiability during training, which will help increase intervention effectiveness.