Vowel distinctiveness as a concurrent predictor of expressive language function in autistic children

AUTISM RESEARCH(2024)

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摘要
Speech ability may limit spoken language development in some minimally verbal autistic children. In this study, we aimed to determine whether an acoustic measure of speech production, vowel distinctiveness, is concurrently related to expressive language (EL) for autistic children. Syllables containing the vowels [i] and [a] were recorded remotely from 27 autistic children (4;1-7;11) with a range of spoken language abilities. Vowel distinctiveness was calculated using automatic formant tracking software. Robust hierarchical regressions were conducted with receptive language (RL) and vowel distinctiveness as predictors of EL. Hierarchical regressions were also conducted within a High EL and a Low EL subgroup. Vowel distinctiveness accounted for 29% of the variance in EL for the entire group, RL for 38%. For the Low EL group, only vowel distinctiveness was significant, accounting for 38% of variance in EL. Conversely, in the High EL group, only RL was significant and accounted for 26% of variance in EL. Replicating previous results, speech production and RL significantly predicted concurrent EL in autistic children, with speech production being the sole significant predictor for the Low EL group and RL the sole significant predictor for the High EL group. Further work is needed to determine whether vowel distinctiveness longitudinally, as well as concurrently, predicts EL. Findings have important implications for the early identification of language impairment and in developing language interventions for autistic children. Some autistic children go on to develop robust spoken language while others do not. Identifying language abilities early is not currently possible but is an important goal, because it would allow for early targeted language intervention. This study explored the relationship between speech intelligibility and expressive language (EL) ability for autistic children using a measure of how different children's productions of the vowels "ee" and "aa" are from each other called vowel distinctiveness. Based on these results, in the near future, this measure may help to predict later EL abilities in autistic children.
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关键词
acoustic analysis,autism,speech,spoken language,vowel distinctiveness
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