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Exploring Motor Speech Disorders in Low and Minimally Verbal Autistic Individuals: An Auditory-Perceptual Analysis.

Marc F MaffeiKaren V ChenauskyAbigail HaensslerClaudia I AbbiatiHelen Tager-FlusbergJordan R Green
Published in: American journal of speech-language pathology (2024)
Our findings provide evidence of a motor speech disorder in this population, characterized by perceptual speech features including reduced intelligibility, decreased consonant and vowel precision, and impairments of speech coordination and consistency. Speech deficits were more associated with articulation than with other speech subsystems. Speech production was more impaired than nonspeech oromotor abilities in a subgroup of the sample. Oromotor deficits were significantly associated with expressive and receptive language skills. Findings are interpreted in the context of known characteristics of the pediatric motor speech disorders childhood apraxia of speech and childhood dysarthria. These results, if replicated in future studies, have significant potential to improve the early detection of language impairments, inform the development of speech and language interventions, and aid in the identification of neurobiological mechanisms influencing communication development.
Keyphrases
  • hearing loss
  • working memory
  • traumatic brain injury
  • autism spectrum disorder
  • physical activity
  • study protocol
  • human health
  • phase iii