2017
DOI: 10.1007/s10803-017-3033-4
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A Retrospective Video Analysis of Canonical Babbling and Volubility in Infants with Fragile X Syndrome at 9–12 Months of Age

Abstract: An infant’s vocal capacity develops significantly during the first year of life. Research suggests early measures of pre-speech development, such as canonical babbling and volubility, can differentiate typical versus disordered development. This study offers a new contribution by comparing early vocal development in 10 infants with Fragile X syndrome and 14 with typical development. Results suggest infants with Fragile X syndrome produce fewer syllables and have significantly lower canonical babbling ratios (i… Show more

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Cited by 53 publications
(63 citation statements)
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“…Canonical babbling has been defined as fully articulated consonant-vowel combinations with adultlike transitions between the consonant and the vowel (e.g., "mama," "da," "baba," "gu") [Lee, Jhang, Relyea, Chen, & Oller, 2018;Oller et al, 1998;Patten et al, 2014]. Unlike early vocalizations, or cooing behaviors, canonical syllables involve consonant-like closure of the vocal tract combined with vowel-like opening such that the sounds produced are recognizable as speechlike [Belardi et al, 2017]. Canonical babbling emerges in TD infants by approximately 6-7 months and is generally well established by 10 months [Oller et al, 1998].…”
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confidence: 99%
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“…Canonical babbling has been defined as fully articulated consonant-vowel combinations with adultlike transitions between the consonant and the vowel (e.g., "mama," "da," "baba," "gu") [Lee, Jhang, Relyea, Chen, & Oller, 2018;Oller et al, 1998;Patten et al, 2014]. Unlike early vocalizations, or cooing behaviors, canonical syllables involve consonant-like closure of the vocal tract combined with vowel-like opening such that the sounds produced are recognizable as speechlike [Belardi et al, 2017]. Canonical babbling emerges in TD infants by approximately 6-7 months and is generally well established by 10 months [Oller et al, 1998].…”
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confidence: 99%
“…The transition from immature vocalizations to canonical babbling is quite salient and recognizable to parents and professionals alike [Oller, Eilers, & Basinger, 2001;Oller et al, 1998]. Delays in the onset of canonical babbling have been associated with a number of non-ASD conditions including hearing impairment [Bass-Ringdahl, 2010;Eilers & Oller, 1994], Fragile X syndrome [Belardi et al, 2017], Down syndrome [Lynch, Oller, Steffens, & Levine, 1995] and cleftpalate [Chapman, Hardin-Jones, Schulte, & Halter, 2001]. Delays in vocal maturity more broadly have also been identified in disorders including specific language impairment [Rescorla & Ratner, 1996] and childhood apraxia of speech [Overby & Caspari, 2015].…”
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confidence: 99%
“…, regardless of the type of vocalization or utterance. In other words, the measure of volubility signifies a prelinguistic marker of vocal ability, whose development has been associated with biological 8 and environmental 6 factors and, more recently, with neuroconstructivist or experience-driven processes.…”
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confidence: 99%
“…11 This observation may be attributed to the inherent methodological limitations associated with the process of recording early markers of speech-sound production. In addition to being time-consuming, measurements on volubility data require longitudinal naturalistic language recordings, 12 whereas the resulting quantification of prespeech vocalizations is often susceptible to performance variability (i.e., performance fluctuations related to socioeconomic status [SES] 6,13 and caregiver interaction, 7,9,10 diverse and interdependent factors associated with neurodevelopmental complexity, 9 etc. ).…”
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