Purpose

The goal of this clinical trial is to determine how memory and attention affect the ability of children with developmental language disorder (DLD) to learn and use new vocabulary.

Conditions

Eligibility

Eligible Ages
Between 5 Years and 10 Years
Eligible Genders
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Yes

Inclusion Criteria

  • Has DLD or typical language development

Exclusion Criteria

  • Has not been exposed to English since birth - Has other neurodevelopmental or sensory condition that could explain the language problem (e.g., intellectual disability, autism, hearing loss).

Study Design

Phase
N/A
Study Type
Interventional
Allocation
Non-Randomized
Intervention Model
Parallel Assignment
Intervention Model Description
Aims 1 and 2 are single group interventions. Aim 3 is not an intervention. Aim 4 is a parallel intervention.
Primary Purpose
Basic Science
Masking
None (Open Label)

Arm Groups

ArmDescriptionAssigned Intervention
Experimental
Prosody
In Aim 1a, the syllables to be repeated are presented with English-like prosody or list-like prosody.
  • Behavioral: Supportive learning
    All interventions are manipulations to the stimuli that the child hears with the goal of discovering which manipulations support verbal learning.
Experimental
Meaning
In Aim 1a, the syllables to be repeated will have meaning (e.g., neck) or no meaning (e.g., ba).
  • Behavioral: Supportive learning
    All interventions are manipulations to the stimuli that the child hears with the goal of discovering which manipulations support verbal learning.
Experimental
Grammar
In Aim 1b, the syllables to be repeated are English adjectives and nouns. They will be presented to obey English grammar (e.g., happy pencil) or not (e.g., pencil happy).
  • Behavioral: Supportive learning
    All interventions are manipulations to the stimuli that the child hears with the goal of discovering which manipulations support verbal learning.
Experimental
Attention
In Aim 2, the syllables to be repeated will be presented in the 'baseline' condition or an 'attention-grabbing' condition. The attention grabbers are a reduction in the audio signal of 10dB (so that the child must listen carefully) and a visual cue (a cartoon character with large ears to cue listening carefully).
  • Behavioral: Supportive learning
    All interventions are manipulations to the stimuli that the child hears with the goal of discovering which manipulations support verbal learning.
Experimental
Encoding
In Aim 4, new words will be learned from instruction that involves active practice (high encoding condition) or passive study (low encoding condition).
  • Behavioral: Cascades
    The intervention is a manipulation of word instruction with the goal of discovering whether weaker word learning results in cascading effects on semantic category memory and sentence comprehension.

Recruiting Locations

Boys Town National Research Hospital
Omaha, Nebraska 68131

More Details

NCT ID
NCT06968169
Status
Recruiting
Sponsor
Father Flanagan's Boys' Home

Study Contact

Principal Investigator
531-355-5068
karla.mcgregor@boystown.org

Detailed Description

The goal of this clinical trial is to determine how memory and attention affect the ability of children with developmental language disorder (DLD) to learn and use new vocabulary. Aims 1-3 include children with DLD and healthy children with typical language development. The general hypothesis is that the memory and attention challenges that characterize DLD, but not healthy development, affect the robustness of word learning. Aim 4 includes healthy children only to simulate the cascading effects of weak word learning on the broader linguistic system. The main questions this clinical trial aims to answer are: What is the role of linguistic long-term memory in children's ability to hold new verbal information in short-term memory? What is the role of attention in children 's ability to hold new verbal information in short-term memory? What are the cascading effects of short-term verbal memory problems on the integrity of the language system? In Aim 1a, researchers will compare syllable repetitions when those syllables do or do not have English-like prosody and do or do not have meaning to see if knowledge of prosody and word meaning supports accurate short-term memory. In Aim 1b, researchers will compare the repetition of adjectives and nouns when those words do or do not have English-like grammar (i.e., when they are presented as adjective + noun rather than noun + adjective) to see if knowledge of word order supports accurate short-term memory. In Aim 2, researchers will compare the syllable repetitions when those syllables are presented with or without attention cues and with or without a delay of 500msec between presentation and response to see if attention facilitates accurate short-term memory. The delay condition is intended to increase load on short-term memory. In Aim 3, all measures are observational. The researchers will assess the child's long-term memory of language, attention skills, and verbal short-term memory to see if children with DLD but good attention skills are able to perform well on short-term memory tasks. In Aim 4, researchers will compare the ability of children to comprehend newly learned words that are taught via active retrieval or passive study. Active retrieval yields more robust learning, and passive study yields weaker learning. The goal is to compare how well children use those newly learned words to recall semantic category information (e.g., was it a bug or a bird) and comprehend sentences to see if the weak word learning has cascading impacts beyond learning the word itself.

Notice

Study information shown on this site is derived from ClinicalTrials.gov (a public registry operated by the National Institutes of Health). The listing of studies provided is not certain to be all studies for which you might be eligible. Furthermore, study eligibility requirements can be difficult to understand and may change over time, so it is wise to speak with your medical care provider and individual research study teams when making decisions related to participation.