12
Participants
Start Date
November 30, 2025
Primary Completion Date
September 30, 2026
Study Completion Date
September 30, 2026
Phono-Motor Therapy
Orthographic stimuli (letters) are introduced from the beginning as each phoneme is being trained. This maintains the focus on phonology, while emphasizing its relevance to reading. PMT consists of an initial phase focused on training of individual phonemes and phoneme sequences in spoken language, followed by written language tasks. English phonemes are first trained in isolation, followed by phoneme sequences in words and pseudowords. They are trained multi-modally through emphasis on auditory, motor, tactile-kinesthetic, visual, and orthographic representations for each consonant and vowel. When sequences are introduced, focus on phonology is maintained by training on pseudowords first before real words are introduced. Participants work on identifying, repeating, parsing, blending, and manipulating phonemes that make up the pseudoword and word stimuli. To maintain focus on phonology, pictures and definitions of the stimuli are never shown or discussed.
Semantic Feature Analysis
"SFA activates semantic features of the target word to help retrieve the spoken form of the word. To target reading, a modified SFA is used with written words rather than pictures as the primary materials. Pictures are instead included for each word as a semantic feature. Stimuli will consist of 80 highly imageable nouns with a range of word frequencies. During treatment the therapist will present a written noun and ask the participant a series of questions about the features of that noun. For example, if the presented noun is juice, the therapist would have the participant select the corresponding picture from an array of pictures. The therapist then would ask, what do you do with it? (eliciting a feature from the function category) and where do you store it in your home? (eliciting a feature from the context category). This is done for a total of 6 categories of semantic features. The process is repeated until the participant reads the noun correctly three times in a row."
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore
Florida State University, Tallahassee
Kessler Foundation, West Orange
National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD)
NIH
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
OTHER