MONDAY, July 19 (HealthDay News) -- An analysis of soundtracks
from a recording system worn by young children might detect
differences in vocalization and help researchers identify those
children who may have autism or language delays, a new study
suggests.
"This automated application makes it possible to monitor development in a completely objective way," said lead researcher Dr. D. Kimbrough Oller, a professor at the University of Memphis.
For the study, Oller and his team attached recorders in the
chest pockets of children's clothing. The device recorded the
children in their natural environments during the course of a
day.
They analyzed nearly 1,500 soundtracks from the recordings of
232 children, aged 10 months to 4 years.
Then, an automated system separated sounds made by the children
and by their environment. The sounds and utterances were classified
and rated, using established vocal development theory
guidelines.
From that, the researchers found consistent differences between
typically developing kids and those previously diagnosed with
autism or those with language delays.
They also could predict a normally developing child's age.
What was different between the groups? "The biggest difference
appears to be the extent to which the kids performed well-formed
syllables," Oller said.
The research is published in the July 19-23 online edition of
the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Oller was previously a paid consultant for the company that made
the recording device. That company was then dissolved and
reconstituted as the not-for-profit LENA Foundation, for which
Oller is now an unpaid consultant.
One expert calls the new research promising. "We're at the early
stage of looking at this as one potential way to screen for the
language delay in autism," said Geraldine Dawson, chief science
officer for Autism Speaks.
"I think it's promising, but it would be important to continue to do further studies and replicate the findings," she added.
One of the pluses of the recording device, she said, is that it
can be used in the home.
But it won't identify all children on the autism spectrum,
Dawson said, which includes children with classic autism and other,
milder developmental disabilities. "Not all children on the autism
spectrum have language delays. The majority of children with autism
do show some delay in the onset of language or early vocalization,"
she said.
"This could be a potentially useful screening tool," she added. Before the automated system, she said analysis of vocalization was mostly observational.
Experts do agree, Dawson said, that many children who go on to
develop autism are not uttering those early vocalizations, known as
communicative babbling.
"Having this automated system makes [the analysis] more objective," she noted.
About one in 110 U.S. children are on the autism spectrum,
according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The spectrum includes a host of developmental disorders that
involve communication, social and behavioral challenges.
More information
To learn more about autism spectrum disorders, visit the
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.