Vocalisation Repertoire at the End of the First Year of Life: An Exploratory Comparison of Rett Syndrome and Typical Development

2022 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

Jump to: Cite & Linked | Documents & Media | Details | Version history

Cite this publication

​Vocalisation Repertoire at the End of the First Year of Life: An Exploratory Comparison of Rett Syndrome and Typical Development​
Bartl-Pokorny, K. D.; Pokorny, F. B.; Garrido, D.; Schuller, B. W.; Zhang, D. & Marschik, P. B.​ (2022) 
Journal of Developmental and Physical Disabilities34(6) pp. 1053​-1069​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10882-022-09837-w 

Documents & Media

document.pdf1.38 MBAdobe PDF

License

GRO License GRO License

Details

Authors
Bartl-Pokorny, Katrin D.; Pokorny, Florian B.; Garrido, Dunia; Schuller, Björn W.; Zhang, Dajie; Marschik, Peter B.
Abstract
Abstract Rett syndrome (RTT) is a rare, late detected developmental disorder associated with severe deficits in the speech-language domain. Despite a few reports about atypicalities in the speech-language development of infants and toddlers with RTT, a detailed analysis of the pre-linguistic vocalisation repertoire of infants with RTT is yet missing. Based on home video recordings, we analysed the vocalisations between 9 and 11 months of age of three female infants with typical RTT and compared them to three age-matched typically developing (TD) female controls. The video material of the infants had a total duration of 424 min with 1655 infant vocalisations. For each month, we (1) calculated the infants’ canonical babbling ratios with CBR UTTER , i.e., the ratio of number of utterances containing canonical syllables to total number of utterances, and (2) classified their pre-linguistic vocalisations in three non-canonical and four canonical vocalisation subtypes. All infants achieved the milestone of canonical babbling at 9 months of age according to their canonical babbling ratios, i.e. CBR UTTER  ≥ 0.15. We revealed overall lower CBRs UTTER  and a lower proportion of canonical pre-linguistic vocalisations consisting of well-formed sounds that could serve as parts of target-language words for the RTT group compared to the TD group. Further studies with more data from individuals with RTT are needed to study the atypicalities in the pre-linguistic vocalisation repertoire which may portend the later deficits in spoken language that are characteristic features of RTT.
Issue Date
2022
Journal
Journal of Developmental and Physical Disabilities 
ISSN
1056-263X
eISSN
1573-3580
Language
English
Sponsor
Austrian Science Fund http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100002428
Oesterreichische Nationalbank http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100004061
Rett Deutschland e.V. http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/N/A
Medical University of Graz http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100010109

Reference

Citations


Social Media