Remediating Residual Rhotic Errors With Traditional and Ultrasound-Enhanced Treatment: A Single-Case Experimental Study

Author:

Preston Jonathan L.12,McAllister Tara3,Phillips Emily2,Boyce Suzanne24,Tiede Mark2,Kim Jackie Sihyun5,Whalen Douglas H.26

Affiliation:

1. Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Syracuse University, NY

2. Haskins Laboratories, New Haven, CT

3. Department of Communicative Sciences & Disorders, New York University, NY

4. Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, University of Cincinnati, OH

5. Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Columbia University, New York, NY

6. Program in Speech-Language-Hearing Sciences, City University of New York Graduate Center, NY

Abstract

Purpose The aim of the study was to examine how ultrasound visual feedback (UVF) treatment impacts speech sound learning in children with residual speech errors affecting /ɹ/. Method Twelve children, ages 9–14 years, received treatment for vocalic /ɹ/ errors in a multiple-baseline across-subjects design comparing 8 sessions of UVF treatment and 8 sessions of traditional (no-biofeedback) treatment. All participants were exposed to both treatment conditions, with order counterbalanced across participants. To monitor progress, naïve listeners rated the accuracy of vocalic /ɹ/ in untreated words. Results After the first 8 sessions, children who received UVF were judged to produce more accurate vocalic /ɹ/ than those who received traditional treatment. After the second 8 sessions, within-participant comparisons revealed individual variation in treatment response. However, group-level comparisons revealed greater accuracy in children whose treatment order was UVF followed by traditional treatment versus children who received the reverse treatment order. Conclusion On average, 8 sessions of UVF were more effective than 8 sessions of traditional treatment for remediating vocalic /ɹ/ errors. Better outcomes were also observed when UVF was provided in the early rather than later stages of learning. However, there remains a significant individual variation in response to UVF and traditional treatment, and larger group-level studies are needed. Supplemental Material https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.8206640

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Otorhinolaryngology

Reference63 articles.

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