Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences, Boston University, MA.
Sargent College of Health & Rehabilitation Sciences, Boston University, MA.
J Speech Lang Hear Res. 2024 Jul 9;67(7):2283-2296. doi: 10.1044/2024_JSLHR-23-00433. Epub 2024 Jun 11.
The current study examined the predictive role of gestures and gesture-speech combinations on later spoken language outcomes in minimally verbal (MV) autistic children enrolled in a blended naturalistic developmental/behavioral intervention (Joint Attention, Symbolic Play, Engagement, and Regulation [JASPER] + Enhanced Milieu Teaching [EMT]).
Participants were 50 MV autistic children (40 boys), ages 54-105 months ( = 75.54, = 16.45). MV was defined as producing fewer than 20 spontaneous, unique, and socially communicative words. Autism symptom severity (Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule-Second Edition) and nonverbal cognitive skills (Leiter-R Brief IQ) were assessed at entry. A natural language sample (NLS), a 20-min examiner-child interaction with specified toys, was collected at entry (Week 1) and exit (Week 18) from JASPER + EMT intervention. The NLS was coded for gestures (deictic, conventional, and representational) and gesture-speech combinations (reinforcing, disambiguating, supplementary, other) at entry and spoken language outcomes: speech quantity (rate of speech utterances) and speech quality (number of different words [NDW] and mean length of utterance in words [MLUw]) at exit using European Distributed Corpora Project Linguistic Annotator and Systematic Analysis of Language Transcripts.
Controlling for nonverbal IQ and autism symptom severity at entry, rate of gesture-speech combinations (but not gestures alone) at entry was a significant predictor of rate of speech utterances and MLUw at exit. The rate of supplementary gesture-speech combinations, in particular, significantly predicted rate of speech utterances and NDW at exit.
These findings highlight the critical importance of gestural communication, particularly gesture-speech (supplementary) combinations in supporting spoken language development in MV autistic children.
本研究考察了手势和手势-言语组合对接受混合自然发展/行为干预(共同注意、象征性游戏、参与和调节[JASPER]+增强环境教学[EMT])的轻度言语(MV)自闭症儿童后期口语发展的预测作用。
参与者为 50 名 MV 自闭症儿童(40 名男孩),年龄 54-105 个月(M=75.54,SD=16.45)。MV 的定义是产生的自发、独特且具有社交性的单词少于 20 个。自闭症症状严重程度(自闭症诊断观察量表第二版)和非言语认知技能(Leiter-R 简明智商)在入组时进行评估。在 JASPER+EMT 干预的入组(第 1 周)和出组(第 18 周)时,采集自然语言样本(NLS),即 20 分钟的检查者-儿童与指定玩具的互动。NLS 在入组时(第 1 周)和出组时(第 18 周)进行手势(指示性、传统性和表象性)和手势-言语组合(强化、澄清、补充、其他)的编码,以及口语产出:出组时的言语量(言语次数率)和言语质量(不同单词数[NDW]和单词平均长度[MLUw]),使用欧洲分布式语料库项目语言标注器和语言记录系统分析进行分析。
控制入组时的非言语智商和自闭症症状严重程度,入组时的手势-言语组合率(而不仅仅是手势)是出组时言语次数率和 MLUw 的显著预测指标。特别是补充性手势-言语组合率显著预测出组时的言语次数率和 NDW。
这些发现强调了手势交流,特别是手势-言语(补充)组合在支持 MV 自闭症儿童口语发展方面的重要性。