Is atypical rhythm a risk factor for developmental speech and language disorders?

Is atypical rhythm a risk factor for developmental speech and language disorders?, The article proposes the Atypical Rhythm Risk Hypothesis, which posits that individuals with poor rhythm are at higher risk for developmental speech/language disorders. If a significant body of evidence is found to support this hypothesis, we can envision new risk factor models that incorporate atypical rhythm to predict risk of developing speech/language disorders., Is atypical rhythm a risk factor for developmental speech and language disorders?

The article proposes the Atypical Rhythm Risk Hypothesis, which posits that individuals with poor rhythm are at higher risk for developmental speech/language disorders. If a significant body of evidence is found to support this hypothesis, we can envision new risk factor models that incorporate atypical rhythm to predict risk of developing speech/language disorders.




Abstract


Although a growing literature points to substantial variation in speech/language abilities related to individual differences in musical abilities, mainstream models of communication sciences and disorders have not yet incorporated these individual differences into childhood speech/language development. This article reviews three sources of evidence in a comprehensive body of research aligning with three main themes: (a) associations between musical rhythm and speech/language processing, (b) musical rhythm in children with developmental speech/language disorders and common comorbid attentional and motor disorders, and (c) individual differences in mechanisms underlying rhythm processing in infants and their relationship with later speech/language development. In light of converging evidence on associations between musical rhythm and speech/language processing, we propose the Atypical Rhythm Risk Hypothesis, which posits that individuals with atypical rhythm are at higher risk for developmental speech/language disorders. The hypothesis is framed within the larger epidemiological literature in which recent methodological advances allow for large‐scale testing of shared underlying biology across clinically distinct disorders. A series of predictions for future work testing the Atypical Rhythm Risk Hypothesis are outlined. We suggest that if a significant body of evidence is found to support this hypothesis, we can envision new risk factor models that incorporate atypical rhythm to predict the risk of developing speech/language disorders. Given the high prevalence of speech/language disorders in the population and the negative long‐term social and economic consequences of gaps in identifying children at‐risk, these new lines of research could potentially positively impact access to early identification and treatment.


This article is categorized under:
Linguistics > Language in Mind and Brain
Neuroscience > Development
Linguistics > Language Acquisition

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