Jones, Skwerer, Pawar, Hamo, Carberry, Ajodan, Caulley, Silverman, McAdoo, Meyer, Yoder, Clements, Lord, Tager-Flusberg
The LENA
system was designed and validated to provide information about the language
environment in children 0 to 4 years of age and its use has been expanded to
populations with a number of communication profiles. Its utility in children
5 years of age and older is not yet known. The present study used acoustic
data from two samples of children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) to
evaluate the reliability of LENA automated analyses for detecting speech
utterances in older, school age children, and adolescents with ASD, in clinic
and home environments. Participants between 5 and 18 years old who were
minimally verbal (study 1) or had a range of verbal abilities (study 2)
completed standardized assessments in the clinic (study 1 and 2) and in the
home (study 2) while speech was recorded from a LENA device. We compared LENA
segment labels with manual ground truth coding by human transcribers using
two different methods. We found that the automated LENA algorithms were not
successful (<50% reliable) in detecting vocalizations from older children
and adolescents with ASD, and that the proportion of speaker
misclassifications by the automated system increased significantly with the
target-child's age. The findings in children and adolescents with ASD suggest
possibly misleading results when expanding the use of LENA beyond the age
ranges for which it was developed and highlight the need to develop novel
automated methods that are more appropriate for older children.