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Speech Sound Disorder clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Speech Sound Disorder.

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NCT ID: NCT06075303 Completed - Clinical trials for Speech Sound Disorder

Dynamic Assessment of Phonological Disorders

Start date: October 4, 2011
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn about (1) how speech skills can be measured and how various tests give speech therapists different types of information for children with speech sound disorder, and (2) whether changes occur in the amount of help children need when they work on easier sounds or harder sounds during treatment. The main questions this study aims to answer are: (1) what does one type of test (dynamic assessment) tell us about speech skills compared to another type of test (static assessment), and (2) does practice of easier or harder sounds show differences in progress. Participants will complete 16 sessions of speech treatment called "modified cycles treatment", and will complete several speech and language tests before, during, and after treatment by pointing to pictures, and saying sounds, words, and sentences.

NCT ID: NCT04625062 Completed - Clinical trials for Speech Sound Disorder

Comparing Traditional and Biofeedback Telepractice Treatment for Residual Speech Errors

C-RESULTS TPT
Start date: September 1, 2020
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to evaluate the relative efficacy of biofeedback and traditional treatment for residual speech errors when both are delivered via telepractice. In a single-case randomization design, up to eight children with RSE will receive both visual-acoustic biofeedback and traditional treatment via telepractice. Acoustic measures of within-session change will be compared across sessions randomly assigned to each condition. It is hypothesized that participants will exhibit a clinically significant overall treatment response and that short-term measures of change will indicate that biofeedback is associated with larger increments of progress than traditional treatment.

NCT ID: NCT04474691 Completed - Clinical trials for Speech Sound Disorder

staRt: Enhancing Speech Treatment With Smartphone-delivered Biofeedback

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

Previous research suggests that biofeedback can outperform traditional interventions for RSE, but no controlled studies have tested this hypothesis in the context of app-delivered biofeedback. The objective of this aim is to use the staRt app to test our working hypothesis that speakers will make larger gains in /r/ accuracy when app-based treatment incorporates biofeedback, compared to a non-biofeedback condition. With a network of cooperating SLPs, this project will recruit 15 children with /r/ misarticulation to receive 8 weeks of intervention using staRt. Individual sessions will be randomly assigned to include or exclude the visual biofeedback display. Randomization tests will be used to evaluate, for each individual, whether larger increments of change are associated with biofeedback and non-biofeedback sessions.

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: NCT03736213 Completed - Clinical trials for Speech Sound Disorder

Delineation of Sensorimotor Subtypes Underlying Residual Speech Errors

C-RESULTS
Start date: March 1, 2019
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

Children with speech sound disorder show diminished accuracy and intelligibility in spoken communication and may thus be perceived as less capable or intelligent than peers, with negative consequences for both socioemotional and socioeconomic outcomes. While most speech errors resolve by the late school-age years, between 2-5% of speakers exhibit residual speech errors (RSE) that persist through adolescence or even adulthood, reflecting about 6 million cases in the US. Both affected children/families and speech-language pathologists (SLPs) have highlighted the critical need for research to identify more effective forms of treatment for children with RSE. In a series of single-case experimental studies, research has found that treatment incorporating technologically enhanced sensory feedback (visual-acoustic biofeedback, ultrasound biofeedback) can improve speech in individuals with RSE who have not responded to previous intervention. Further research is needed to understand heterogeneity across individuals in the magnitude of response to biofeedback treatment. The overall objective of this proposal is to conduct clinical research that will guide the evidence-based management of RSE while also providing novel insights into the sensorimotor underpinnings of speech. The central hypothesis is that individual deficit profiles will predict relative response to visual-acoustic vs ultrasound biofeedback. From the larger population of children with RSE evaluated as part of C-RESULTS-RCT (Correcting Residual Errors With Spectral, Ultrasound, Traditional Speech Therapy Randomized Controlled Trial), a subset of 8 children will be selected who show a deficit in one domain (auditory or somatosensory) and intact perception in the other. Single-case methods will be used to test the hypothesis that sensory deficit profiles differentially predict response to visual-acoustic vs ultrasound biofeedback.

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: NCT03538925 Completed - Down Syndrome Clinical Trials

Building Sentences With Preschoolers Who Use AAC

Start date: May 11, 2018
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The focus of this investigation is to compare the effectiveness of the AAC Generative Language Intervention approach to an AAC Standard of Care condition on preschool sentence productions. All children will use existing AAC iPad applications.

NCT ID: NCT02935062 Completed - Clinical trials for Speech Sound Disorders

New Therapeutical Perspectives in Cases of Phonological Disorders

Start date: July 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of this study is to verify phonological and auditory aspects of children submitted to traditional phonological therapy, phonological therapy using a software and placebo therapy in children with phonological disorders.

NCT ID: NCT02490826 Completed - Speech Disorders Clinical Trials

Table to Tablet (T2T): A Novel Intervention Framework for Children With Speech Sound Disorders

Start date: October 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The primary aim of this study is to develop software as a tool in speech and language therapy for the treatment of children (Portuguese and English) with phonologically based Speech Sound Disorders (SSD). Further, this project aims to test the effectiveness of this approach with two groups of preschool and school aged children with phonologically based SSD, with one group consisting of European Portuguese (EP) speakers and one group of British English (BE) speakers. Performance across the two groups will be compared. The total duration of the project will be 30 month.

NCT ID: NCT01905449 Completed - Clinical trials for Speech Sound Disorders

Ultrasound Biofeedback for Speech Sound Disorders

Start date: May 2013
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

Children with speech sound disorders will receive speech therapy using real-time images of the tongue from ultrasound. These images will be used to cue the child to change the tongue position when producing speech sounds.