The Impact of Augmentative and Alternative Communication Intervention on the Speech Production of Individuals With Developmental Disabilities: A Research Review

Author:

Millar Diane C.1,Light Janice C.2,Schlosser Ralf W.3

Affiliation:

1. The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, and University of North Texas, Denton

2. The Pennsylvania State University, University Park

3. Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts

Abstract

Purpose This article presents the results of a meta-analysis to determine the effect of augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) on the speech production of individuals with developmental disabilities. Method A comprehensive search of the literature published between 1975 and 2003, which included data on speech production before, during, and after AAC intervention, was conducted using a combination of electronic and hand searches. Results The review identified 23 studies, involving 67 individuals. Seventeen of these studies did not establish experimental control, thereby limiting the certainty of evidence about speech outcomes. The remaining 6 studies, involving 27 cases, had sufficient methodological rigor for the “best evidence analysis” (cf. R. E. Slavin, 1986). Most of the participants (aged 2–60 years) had mental retardation or autism; the AAC interventions involved instruction in manual signs or nonelectronic aided systems. None of the 27 cases demonstrated decreases in speech production as a result of AAC intervention, 11% showed no change, and the majority (89%) demonstrated gains in speech. For the most part, the gains observed were modest, but these data may underestimate the effect of AAC intervention on speech production because there were ceiling effects. Conclusions Future research is needed to better delineate the relationship between AAC intervention and speech production across a wider range of participants and AAC interventions.

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference53 articles.

1. American Speech Language Hearing Association (1991). Report: Augmentative and alternative communication. Committee on Augmentative Communication American Speech-Language-Hearing Association. ASHA Suppl. 5 9–12.

2. Use of the alternating treatments design as a strategy for empirically determining language training approaches with mentally retarded children;Barrett R. P.;Research in Developmental Disabilities,1987

3. Sign language and multisensory input training of children with communication and related developmental disorders;Benaroya S.;Journal of Autism and Childhood Schizophrenia,1977

4. When you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail;Beukelman D.;Augmentative and Alternative Communication,1987

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