Highman Chantelle, Hennessey Neville W, Leitão Suze, Piek Jan P
aSchool of Psychology and Speech Pathology, Curtin Health Innovation Research Institute, Curtin University, Perth, Australia.
Dev Neuropsychol. 2013;38(3):197-210. doi: 10.1080/87565641.2013.774405.
This study examined early features of the heritable phenotype associated with childhood apraxia-of-speech (CAS). We compared speech and language development from 9 to 24 months of age in eight children at familial risk of CAS to that of eight infants with no such family history. At-risk infants scored lower on expressive language, speech development, and fine motor skills. Results support a broad, heritable verbal trait deficit for children at risk of CAS. Single case analyses showed poor prelinguistic speech development can dissociate from emerging receptive language and conceptualization skills, consistent with a deficit originating in speech motor control.