Guest guest Posted March 3, 2010 Report Share Posted March 3, 2010 Hi all- Here is my update of how my 35 month old Son has been doing after Week one- two on NV. - I will refer to your guidelines in my response.... Tyler is 35 months old His diagnoses include Moderate to Severe Apraxia, Mild PVL, hypotonia. 1. Speech Improvements.... he is making a greater effort to speak to us..... he is babbling up a storm..... and becomes very frustrated because we do not understand what he is saying. My Son's speech has always been extremely delayed..... despite 4x per week therapy, the most we have been able to accomplish are one to two word utterances/approximations. His Speech issues have included: restricted consonants, reduction of words to a single vowel, vowel distortions, inability to sequence consonants.... there are more issues on his Speech Report.... I just listed a few. The babbling is new...... ALSO- as he is babbling-- he also makes gestures in an attempt to try to tell us what he is talking about! What is interesting is that he is using his same KNOWN words/word approximations AND HE IS ALSO babbling between these. (almost like he is speaking in his own form of sentences now). He also has developed many new word approximations. He has started to imitate things we say more.... My hubby and I can be engaged in a convo- and my Son tries to mimic what we are saying... (This is new). One more thing-- Tyler NEVER babbled as a baby..... Classic for Apraxia..... he is making up for that lost time now! 2. Language Improvements: He has ALWAYS demonstrated an ability to understand what is said to him prior to being on NV.... for example- if we tell him to get something... he will do it. He has seemed to have improved with following multi step directions..... such as " get your coat and shoes " ..... before NV- he would just get one item. 3. Increase in Facial Expressions- a definite yes..... Before NV, he was the type of kid who was always smiling.... and who liked to play jokes on us..... We call him our " little prankster " .... AFTER NV- the smiles remain.... BUT , during the above mentioned babbling that goes on between words or word approximations, he now has many more facial expressions. Before NV.... he would say his usual one or 2 words.... and then his mouth would kind of " hang open " .....with an " almost blank expression " .... Now- we are seeing many more facial expressions besides the smiles. 4.. Quicker Motor Planning- a definite yes..... he has seemed more interested in doing things himself.....things that he usually would want me to do for him. For example, he did a fairly decent job of getting his coat on all by himself for the first time..... without prompting after week one! By week 2, he is able to put his coat on completely by himself (using the " one, two, peek a boo method " - (where he pulls the coat over his head). I used to always put his coat on for him-- but decided to teach him how to do it himself.... he learned very quickly! He has been helping himself to things from the fridg..... and announces what he is going to get prior to opening up the fridg. 5. Academics/Learning: N/A to my Son- he has not yet started school. Does it count that my child learned how to put his coat on by himself in less than one week though? I say yes! 6. Fine and Gross Motor Skills: I see no change in fine motor-- he never had probs in this area. He did have Gross Motor Delays due to his Hypotonia. He made his first attempt at jumping after week one on NV.... He still has not " officially jumped " .... but he is getting closer to it! We have been working on this for months.... and after one week of NV.... he started to do it. 7. Sense of Humor No change- our Son always had a great sense of Humor - (always laughing, smiling, etc). 8. FOCUS This remains a problem for us.... Our Son has always had a short attention span.... which can interfere with his Therapy.... If I really think about it.... I WILL say that on SOME days, he seems to focus better during therapy..... but, his attention span remains a problem. This is about all that I noticed from your list, . Other things..... he had really stinky poops during the first week.... these poops were formed, but they were HUGE-- (I have no idea how some of them came out of his little bum).... He at times, had a few of these " monsters " each day..... and we had to triple bag each of them... they REALLY smelled! LOL ! Some of these huge formed poops had a " gunky greasy looking " liquid - like thick diarrhea around them. He is back to normal now. -He was hyper like many have described, but this has reduced as well. -He woke up in the middle of the night after day 2 or 3 SCREAMING and kept pointing to his head and telling us " EH UR " (head hurts).... This only happened once..... We have since, made sure he has more water during the day. - He has lost one pound since we started NV..... (not a big deal).... he has been more active. -I also noticed that Tyler seemed to have had a massive increase in his night time urination near the end of week one. It was easy for me to notice this- because he still wears diapers. We had been pushing more water throughout the day.... but we did not do this at night. Tyler also goes to bed quite late..... and is changed prior to bedtime. He was completely drenched in the am.... I am talking about a totally SOAKED through heavy sleeper and visibly wet bedding. I am wondering if his body was processing toxins! This has reduced at week 2. That is about it! 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Guest guest Posted March 3, 2010 Report Share Posted March 3, 2010 this is all so incredible! OK the question is how many days would you say it was prior to you noticing any changes in Tyler? Also -with the academic like you say he's probably too young to know any changes in that area in the classic sense -but starting to recognize colors, numbers, letters...enjoying picture books and coloring -observing any difference in how he holds and uses his crayons -things like that you can look at in his age. And yes I'd say learning how to put his coat on by himself totally counts!!!! -that's HUGE!!! Don't forget we have the survey that you helped us design up at http://www.pursuitofresearch.org right on the front page you'll see the link -but the link is on every page. Should we take the survey whenever or wait till our kids are on it for at least a month prior to taking the survey? Also we are open to your constructive criticism on the site -Jolie and I have worked really hard on it trying to cover all the basic questions. And call me when you have a chance -have some cool stuff to share About the babbling -I'm so happy you brought that up because we've for sure covered the terrible two stage that some of the kids here go through later that is so important -but there are as I talked to you about other developmental stages that some kids go through later too -and better later than never. Mel went through the oral exploration/chewing on things stage...after a few weeks on nutriiveda. Of course when they go through these stages later -they don't last long. But developmentally they are important. And yes -as you said your little guy never babbled -and that is as you know such an important stage of acquiring speech! (I have more on that below) When Tanner was little I learned about the importance of " blocking " for sentences. What your babe is doing is getting ready for his sentences (exciting!!!) What we used to do is work on breath control with a whistle and try to get Tanner to imitate toots on a whistle. What his therapist said is that if he didn't have the breath control to imitate the long and short toots on a whistle, he wouldn't have the breath control for a sentence. That was a huge issue for Tanner even as he got to school age and started to read- if you check the archives he used to complain if he read out loud for a few pages that his " breath hurt " I never knew what that meant...but you may because of the fact you are a nurse. One of our friends who is an MD had a surgery on his neck and it cut his vocal cords and he had to relearn how to speak -and he told me he knew exactly what Tanner meant about his breath hurting. Point is that what...it's been TWO WEEKS!!! I mean this is just incredible we are seeing so much so quickly in so many. I can tell you from what I've seen in Tanner who's been on this the longest in our group (and then Mel second longest) that the surges do not stop -I mean as I wrote before I didn't think Tanner could have gotten any better than what seemed like " normal " but what I still see improvements in now is how quick he is in sense of humor -like a comic at times. And some of his reflections- just so mature and well thought out. Here is some info on the importance of the stage Tyler is going through now. Again because he is going through it later it won't last as long as it would have! BABBLING AND EARLY WORDS A child's entrance into human society begins with the onset of language development. Parents often acknowledge this accomplishment upon hearing their infant's first words. Research on early language has convinced scientists that the emergence of first words is inseparable from important developmental milestones that occur prior to the recording of these words. Pre-speech vocalizations can be examined narrowly within the verbal domain only, or can be explored in a wider scope as related to cognitive and communicative developments that are established during the first year of life. The study of pre-speech vocalizations flourished during the last quarter of the twentieth century. During the late 1970s and early 1980s, most efforts concentrated on describing the sounds infants produce. In the 1990s, study of pre-speech development expanded in several important directions. The Form of Infants' Pre-Speech Vocalizations Pre-speech vocalizations are divided into reflexive vocalizations (e.g., cries, coughs, hiccups), which are related to the baby's physical state, and nonreflexive vocalizations (e.g., cooing, playful productions, yelling), which contain phonetic and syllabic features of speech. Both vowels and consonants appear in nonreflexive vocalizations, and the most prevalent syllable structure is a consonant followed by a vowel (CV; e.g., \ba\, \du\, \ke\). The overall composition of pre-speech vocalizations changes dramatically during the first year of life. In the first six months, babies all over the world sound alike. During this period, vowels predominate and are supported by prolonged back consonants (e.g., \k\, \g\). During the next six months, the sound repertoire significantly expands, with a marked shift toward more frontal consonants. Locke reported in 1993 that, by their first birthday, American English-speaking infants produce stops (\p\, \b\, \t\, \d\, \k\, \g\), nasals (\m\, \n\), and glides (\w\, \j\). Stages in the Development of Pre-Speech Vocalizations Developmental stages of pre-speech vocalizations (e.g., as described by Carol Stoel-Gammon in 1998) are not discrete, and vocalizations from previous stages continue to be uttered subsequently. Novel emergent behaviors define the beginning of a new stage. Ages are assigned to each stage as estimates only, because children differ greatly regarding the timing for recording milestones of early language development. The first stage (from zero to two months), phonation, is characterized mainly by fussing, crying, sneezing, and burping, which bear little resemblance to adult speech. The second stage (at two to three months), cooing, begins when back vowels and nasals appear together with velar consonants (e.g., \gu\, \ku\). Cooing differs in its acoustic characteristics from adult vocalizations and is recorded mainly during interactions with caregivers. In the third stage (at four to six months), vocal play or expansion, syllable-like productions with long vowels appear. Squeals, growls, yells, bilabial or labiodental trills, and friction noises demonstrate infants' playful exploration of their vocal tract capabilities during this stage. In the extremely important canonical babbling stage (at seven to ten months), two types of productions emerge: reduplicated babbling� " identical, repetitive sequences of CV syllables (e.g., \ma\ma\, \da\da\); and variegated babbling� " sequences of different consonants and vowels (e.g., CV, V, VC, VCV = \ga\e\im\ada\). Such productions are not true words, as they lack meaning. Canonical babbling is syllabic, containing mainly frontal stops, nasals, and glides coupled with lax vowels (e.g., \a\, \e\, \o\). The emergence of canonical babbling is highly important, holding predictive value for future linguistic developments. Oller and her colleagues in 1999 argued that babies who do not produce canonical babbling on time are at high risk for future speech and language pathology, and should be carefully evaluated by a language clinician. In the fifth stage (at twelve to thirteen months), jargon or intonated babble, infants produce long strings of syllables having varied stress and intonation patterns. Jargon sounds like whole sentences conveying the contents of statements or questions, and often co-occurs with real words. Yet, it lacks linguistic content or grammatical structure. Pre-Speech Vocalizations in Different Target Languages The early interpretation of similarities in the phonetic structure of babbling among infants who acquire different languages (e.g., Japanese, Hebrew) was that pre-speech vocalizations are universal. This observation was explained by the strong constraints of the mouth's anatomical characteristics and by physiological mechanisms controlling movements of the tongue and palate. Cross-linguistic research in the 1990s revealed, however, that clear influences of segmental and suprasegmental patterns (i.e., intonation and stress) of the input are recognizable in pre-speech vocalizations. This is particularly true during the second half of the first year of life. In a longitudinal comparative study by Bénédicte de Boysson-Baradis (1999) of ten-month-old Spanish, English, Japanese, and Swedish infants, the relative distribution of consonants in their canonical babbling resembled the distribution of these segments in their language. As babies grow, the segmental similarity between their babbling and early words increases. Several studies by Jusezyk and colleagues on speech perception indicate that infants' sensitivity to the acoustics and phonetics of languages increases with age, influencing their ability to discriminate the sequences of sounds and syllable structures typical to their own language. Indirect evidence for the role of audition in the development of pre-speech vocalizations derives from studies on deaf children, who show significant delays in the emergence of canonical babbling and also a decreased variety of consonants uttered from age eight months onward. Mutual Imitation within Mother-Child Interaction In 1989 Metchthild and Hanus Papoušsek were among the first researchers to point out that more than 50 percent of two- to five-month-olds' noncrying vocalizations are either infant imitations of mothers' previous vocalizations or mothers' imitations of infants' previous vocalizations. They suggested that this mutual vocal matching mechanism relates to the emotional regulation of communication in the beginning of life. Joanna Blake and Bénédicte de Boysson-Bardies found in 1992 that infants tend to vocalize more while manipulating small objects and especially when adults are present. Edy Veneziano in 1988 analyzed vocal turn taking in pairs of nine- to seventeen- month-old babies and their mothers. She reported that, as children advance toward conventional language, mothers' imitations of what babies say becomes selective. Mothers imitate only those infant vocalizations resembling conventional words, thus signaling to the child what constitutes a linguistic symbol with meaning. Pre-Symbolic Productions in Hearing and in Deaf Infants Cumulative research on pre-speech vocalizations clearly indicates that babbling is in fact structurally and functionally related to early speech. Locke argued in 1996 that when variegated babbling emerges, a consistent relation is identified between vocalizations and specific communicative functions (i.e., protest, question, and statement). At around age eighteen months, the child's phonological system is clearly shaped by the target language's phonetic characteristics, and at that time conventional words emerge. Indirect evidence for the developmental significance of babbling was published in a revolutionary 1991 paper by Petitto and a Marentette on hand babbling in two deaf infants of signing mothers. The argument was that these two infants (who were recorded at ages ten, twelve, and fourteen months) produced far more manual babbling than three matched hearing infants at similar ages. The deaf infants' hand babbling also revealed phonetic features of American Sign Language, suggesting that babbling reflects infants' innate ability to analyze phonetic and syllabic components of linguistic input. Pre-Speech Productions and First Words or Signs Early words are produced by the child in expected contexts, and hence are recognized by familiar listeners as linguistic units conveying meanings. In 1999 Esther Dromi distinguished between comprehensible and meaningful words. Comprehensible words are phonetically consistent forms resembling adult words that caregivers understand, but that do not yet convey referential meanings. Meaningful words are symbolic, arbitrary, and agreed-upon terms of reference. Considerable variation exists in both the age of speech onset and the rate of early lexical development. Large-scale questionnaire data reported in 1994 by Fenson and his colleagues for English-speaking typically developing children, cited the range of vocabulary size for twelve- to thirteen- month-olds at 0 to 67 different words, and for eighteen- to nineteen-month-olds at 13 to 471 different words. In 2000 Maital and her colleagues reported very similar figures for Hebrew. Early words are constructed from a limited set of consonants, mainly stops, nasals, and glides. Syllable structures in these words are usually CV, CVC, or CVCV. Several researchers found that during the first few months of lexical learning, many new words are composed from segments that the child is already using in babbling. A number of researchers have proposed that patterns of lexical selection and avoidance reflect the child's production capabilities. When productive vocabularies contain more than a hundred different words, the influences of phonology on the lexicon decline. Nevertheless, children who have relatively larger lexicons of single words also show larger inventories of sounds and syllable structures than children with smaller productive lexicons. Precocious word learners have much larger phonetic inventories than typically developing children at age eighteen months. The major semantic achievement in the first few months of vocabulary learning is the ability to use words referentially. Martyn Barrett and Esther Dromi, who independently carried out detailed longitudinal analyses of repeated uses of the same words over time, have argued that some early words show referential use from their outset, while other words are initially produced only in very specific contexts. Throughout the one-word stage, the phonology of words improves, and meanings become symbolic and arbitrary. A word initially produced in just one situation is now uttered in a much wider range of contexts, until it becomes completely context free and referential. As words become conventional tools for expressing meanings, the amount of pre-speech vocalizations declines and gradually disappears. See also: INFANCY; LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT Bibliography Barrett, Martyn. " Early Semantic Representations and Early Word Usage. " In Stan Kuczay and Martyn Barrett eds., The Development of Word Meaning. New York: Springer, 1986. Blake, Joanna, and Bénédicte de Boysson-Bardies. " Patterns inBabbling: A Cross-Linguistic Study. " Journal of Child Language 19 (1992):51-74. de Boysson-Bardies, Bénédicte. How Language Comes to Children:From Birth to Two Years. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1999. Dromi, Esther. Early Lexical Development. Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge University Press, 1987. Dromi, Esther. " Early Lexical Development. " In Martyn Barrett ed., The Development of Language. London: UCL Press, 1999. Fenson, Larry, Philip S. Dale, J. Reznick, Bates, Donna Thal, and S. J. Pethick. Variability in Early Communication Development. Malden, MA: Blackwell, 1994. Jusczyk, W. The Discovery of Spoken Language. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1997. Locke, L. The Child's Path to Spoken Language. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1993. Locke, L. " Why Do Infants Begin to Talk? Language as anUnintended Consequence. " Journal of Child Language 23 (1996):251-268. Maital, Sharone L., Esther Dromi, Avi Sagi, and Marc H. Borenstein. " The Hebrew Communicative Development Inventory: Language Specific Properties and Cross-Linguistic Generalizations. " Journal of Child Language 27 (2000):43-67. Oller, D., and E. Eilers. " The Role of Audition in Infant Babbling. " Journal of Child Language 59 (1988):441-449. Papoušek, Metchthild, and Hanus Papoušek. " Form and Function of Vocal Matching in Interactions between Mothers and Their Precanonical Infants. " First Language 9 (1989):137-158. Petitto, A., and a F. Marentette. " Babbling in the Manual Mode: Evidence for the Ontogeny of Language. " Science 251 (1991):1493-1496. Stoel-Gammon, Carol. " Role of Babbling and Phonology in Early Linguistic Development. " In Amy M. Wetherby, F. Warren, and J. Reichle eds., Transitions in Prelinguistic Communication. Baltimore: s, 1997. Veneziano, Edy. " Vocal-Verbal Interaction and the Construction ofEarly Lexical Knowledge. " In M. D. and L. Locke eds., The Emergent Lexicon: The Child's Development of a Linguistic Vocabulary. New York: Academic Press, 1988. Vihman, Marilyn M. Phonological Development: The Origins of Language in the Child. Cambridge, MA: Blackwell, 1996. Esther Dromi Start prev 38 of 301 Babbling and Early Words Copyright © 2002 by Macmillan Reference USA, an imprint of Gale Group ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ PS -don't forget to share your opinion on when we should take the quiz at http://www.pursuitofresearch.org and you don't have to ask " what page is it on? " Because we put a link from every page right on top!! Yay!!! ===== Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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