Stability and validity of an automated measure of vocal development from day-long samples in children with and without Autism Spectrum Disorder
Autism spectrum disorder,Typically Developing
Yoder, Oller, Richards, Gray, Gilkerson
Individual
difference measures of vocal development may eventually aid our understanding
of the variability in spoken language acquisition in children with autism
spectrum disorder (ASD). Large samples of child vocalizations may be needed
to maximize the stability of vocal development estimates. Day-long vocal
samples can now be automatically analyzed based on acoustic characteristics
of speech likeness identified in theoretically driven and empirically
cross-validated quantitative models of typical vocal development. This report
indicates that a single day-long recording can produce a stable estimate for
a measure of vocal development that is highly related to expressive spoken
language in a group of young children with ASD and in a group that is typically
developing.