Friday, December 15, 2017

Predicting the Birth of a Spoken Word


Early on, young children are surrounded by words, but they do not yet know what these words mean, or how to use the words themselves. Despite not yet knowing the meanings of words, the experiences and interactions that surround the usage of these words may drive the emergence of word knowledge. Laboratory studies, however, are not ideal for examining real-world experiences. In this novel study, the researchers examined the combination of factors that were most predictive of word knowledge in a naturalistic environment.

To collect these data, the researchers conducted a large-scale, longitudinal observation of a single, typically-developing child. They collected audio and video recording from all rooms of the child’s house from birth to age 3 years, adding up to 200,000 hours of data. They analyzed the space, time, and language context for each word spoken to the child. For instance, the word “breakfast” was most often spoken in the kitchen, between 8:00am to 10:00am, and was often spoken with other words such as “chew”, “yum”, and the child’s name. The main outcome measure was the age at which individual words were spoken by the child. They found that words produced in distinct spatial, temporal, and linguistic contexts were produced earlier by the child, suggesting they were easier to learn. These three factors were also strongly correlated with one another, and were stronger predictors of the age at which the child first produced a word than how frequently the word was said to the child.

Taken together, this rich observational study supports the notion that words produced in more distinctive contexts are learned earlier. It is important to note that because these data came from one child, the generalizability of these findings needs to be established. Nevertheless, this study demonstrates how multimodal data collection is valuable in understanding language acquisition. The causal structure of language acquisition is a complex puzzle, but these data provide some evidence for revealing part of this process.


Blogger: Nicolette Noonan is a PhD student in Psychology, supervised by Drs. Lisa Archibald and Marc Joanisse.

Thursday, December 7, 2017

Developing a Phonological Awareness Curriculum: Reflections on an Implementation Science Framework


Evidence-based practice refers to the integration of best research evidence with clinical practice and patient values. It is becoming increasingly clear, however, that having research evidence available does not always lead to practice change, and we need to understand why. Implementation Science focuses on the process of adopting evidence-based practices and sustaining intervention fidelity in everyday settings. The focus of this paper was to outline the development and implementation of a Tier 2 curriculum focusing on phonological awareness and alphabet knowledge in public pre-school settings.

The authors describe the evolution of their work around four phases. During the exploration phase, researchers collaborated with classrooms teachers who would be implementing the intervention to create an intervention that was low cost, and user friendly. In the preparation stage, materials and instructions were designed to align with the evidence. After an initial implementation phase, however, the expected treatment effect was not observed and another 4-phase cycle was initiated. In the second exploration and preparation phases, lesson plans were created to allow greater flexibility and modelling related to the evidence-based strategies but that also fit the setting better. Subsequent small-scale and large-scale implementation phases revealed significant gains as expected. Afterwards, teachers were asked to complete a survey and take part in a focus group in order to contribute to plans for the final, sustainment phase.

Implementation science has been identified as one way to bridge the researcher-clinician gap. Especially in the field of communication sciences and disorders where clinician friendly, evidence-based practices are needed, implementation research could be encouraged for the development of sustainable interventions.


Blogger: Meghan Vollebregt is a student in the combined MClSc/PhD program working under the supervision of Dr. Lisa Archibald. Meghan’s research examines the effectiveness of school-based clinician-researcher partnerships as a means to close the practice-research gap.