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Intensive Speech Motor Chaining Treatment for Residual Speech Sound Disorders

Phase 1
Recruiting
Conditions
Speech Sound Disorder
Interventions
Behavioral: Speech Motor Chaining
Registration Number
NCT05929859
Lead Sponsor
Syracuse University
Brief Summary

The goal of this randomized-controlled trial is to compare distributed treatment schedules and intensive treatment schedules in 84 school-age children with residual speech sound disorders. The main question it aims to answer is:

* How does intensive and distributed treatment affect speech sound learning in residual speech sound disorder?

Some participants will be treated with a traditional Distributed schedule of 2 sessions per weeks for 8 weeks (16 hours total), whereas others will be treated with an Intensive schedule and will complete 16 hours of treatment in 4 weeks.

Detailed Description

Residual speech sound disorders are defined as speech sound disorders that persist past \~8-9 years and may lead to social, academic, and vocational limitations. Thus, there is a need to investigate how treatment schedules affect speech sound learning. The overall objective of this study is to optimize a suite of theoretically motivated, high-fidelity, motor-based treatments delivered at the appropriate intensity, despite practical barriers, for the most commonly impacted RSSD sounds: /ɹ, s/. Our central working hypothesis, supported by our preliminary work, is that Speech Motor Chaining is more efficacious when delivered intensively (i.e., closely spaced for a fixed number of sessions). The theoretical rationale is that increasing intensity early in treatment will mitigate erred practice between sessions, improving outcomes relative to more customary practice distributions. To test this hypothesis, children will be randomly assigned to receive a standard Distributed treatment schedule or an Intensive treatment schedule.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
84
Inclusion Criteria
  • Must speak American English as a dominant language.
  • Must have began learning English by at least the age of 3 years.
  • Must be between 9;0 to 17;11 years of age.
  • Must have reported difficulty with /ɹ/ and/or /s/ production
  • Must pass pure tone hearing screening at 25 dB at 1000, 2000, and 4000 Hz.
  • Must receive a scaled score of at least 5 on the Listening Comprehension and Story Retelling subtests of the Test of Integrated Language and Literacy Skills (TILLS)
  • Must receive a percentile score of 5 or below on the Goldman-Fristoe Test of Articulation-3 (GFTA-3) Sounds in Words subtest.
  • Must have 1 scorable response with 5+ consecutive correct /pataka/ with > 3.4 syllables per second in the MRR-Tri task of the Maximum Performance Tasks OR must demonstrate no childhood apraxia of speech (CAS-only) features in BOTH articulatory and rate/prosody domains of the ProCAD.
  • Must score <40% accurate on /ɹ/ and/or /s/ probes assessing these sounds at the word level.
  • Must express a desire to modify their speech.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Must have no known history of autism spectrum disorder, Down Syndrome, cerebral palsy, intellectual disability, permanent hearing loss, or brain injury.
  • Must not have current cleft palate or voice disorder.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Intensive TreatmentSpeech Motor ChainingSpeech Motor Chaining will be delivered in an intensive fashion. Week 1: 8 sessions (2 sessions per day on 4 different days) Week 2: 3 sessions (1 per day on 3 different days) Week 3: 3 sessions (1 per day on 3 different days) Week 4: 2 sessions (1 per day on 2 different days)
Distributed TreatmentSpeech Motor ChainingSpeech Motor Chaining will be delivered twice weekly for 8 weeks
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in percent correct for treated sound, rated by blinded listeners.Before the initiation of treatment and again 10 weeks later.

To assess generalization of treatment gains to untreated words, participants will read a 200-word probe list eliciting the treated sound (/ɹ/ or /s/). Stimuli in each probe will be presented individually in randomized order. No auditory models will be provided; for children with reading difficulty, semantic cues will be provided to elicit the intended word. Individual words will be isolated from the audio record of each word probe and presented in randomized order for binary rating (correct/incorrect) by listeners who are blind to treatment condition and time point (but will see the written representation of each target word). We will use the change in percent correct as our primary measure of perceptually rated accuracy.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Proportion of responders and non-responders in each group.10 weeks after the start of treatment.

A chi-square test will be used to analyze the proportion of responders and non-responders (i.e., those above/below 15% change on the probes) in each group.

Survey evaluating impacts of speech disorder on participants' social, emotional, and academic well-being.Before the initiation of treatment and again 10 weeks later.

This survey asks parents and participants to report the impact of speech disorder on their child's/their social, emotional, and academic well-being. Parents and participants are asked to select a number from 1 to 5 (1 = Strongly disagree, 3 = Neutral, 5 = Strongly agree). For all questions, a higher score indicates a greater degree of negative impact of speech disorder on social, emotional, or academic well-being.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Syracuse University

🇺🇸

Syracuse, New York, United States

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