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Specific Language Impairment clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Specific Language Impairment.

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NCT ID: NCT06001866 Completed - Clinical trials for Language Development

Retrieval-Based Word Learning in Developmental Language Disorder: Verb Learning

Start date: March 1, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Children with developmental language disorder (DLD; also referred to as specific language impairment) experience a significant deficit in language ability that is longstanding and harmful to the children's academic, social, and eventual economic wellbeing. Word learning is one of the principal weaknesses in these children. This project focuses on the word learning abilities of four- and five-year-old children with DLD. The goal of the project is to build on the investigators' previous work to determine whether, as has been found thus far, special benefits accrue when these children must frequently recall newly introduced words during the course of learning. The focus of the current study is verb-learning. The goal of the study is to increase children's absolute levels of learning while maintaining the advantage that repeated retrieval holds over comparison methods of learning.

NCT ID: NCT04141332 Completed - Clinical trials for Specific Language Impairment

Specific Language Impairment (SLI) in Children May Caused by Epileptic Brain Activity

Start date: February 1, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The objective of this study was to find if there is a possible association and the impact of epilepsy and epileptiform activity in children with SLI.

NCT ID: NCT01829360 Completed - Clinical trials for Specific Language Impairment

Accelerating Word Learning in Children With Language Impairment

Start date: March 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This research attempts to adapt and optimize a word learning treatment, specifically interactive book reading, for use with Kindergarten children with Specific Language Impairment (SLI). Children with SLI have difficulty learning language without any obvious cause for this difficulty. This study will examine the best way to achieve the appropriate intensity of 36 exposures. For example, is it better to hear the new words many times within the book (high dose) and to read the book few times (low dose frequency), or is it better to hear the new words a few times within the book (low dose) and to read the book many times (high dose frequency). The investigators hypothesize that reading the books many times will be more effective than repeating the words many times within a book.