Early CI Improves Kids' Learning
February 2010
Editor: The evidence that early implantation of kids with hearing loss
greatly improves future language skills continues to grow. Here's the
latest from Indiana University.
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Learning words may be facilitated by early exposure to auditory input,
according to research presented by the Indiana University School of
Medicine at the American Association for the Advancement of Science Annual
Meeting in San Diego, Feb. 18-22.
A growing body of evidence points to the importance of early auditory
input for developing language skills. Indiana University Department of
Otolaryngology researchers have contributed to that evidence with several
projects, including their study involving 20 deaf children (22- to
40-months-old and 12 to 18 months after cochlear implantation) and 20
normal hearing children (12- to 40-months of age) that was presented Feb.
21 at the AAAS meeting.
The study's principal author, Derek Houston, Ph.D., associate professor
and Philip F. Holton Scholar at the IU School of Medicine, said the study
found that deaf children's word-learning skills were strongly affected by
their early auditory experience.
"This research is significant because surgery at very young ages
requires more expertise," said Dr. Houston. "It is important to know if
the increased benefit of early auditory input warrants surgery at younger
ages."
Currently, the Food and Drug Administration guidelines approve cochlear
implantation at one year of age, although many children are implanted as
young as 6 months of age.
Dr. Houston said the research showed that deaf children's word-learning
skill was strongly affected by their early auditory experience, whether
that experience was through normal means or with a cochlear implant.
Children who received the implant by the age of 13 months performed
similarly to their normal-hearing counterparts while children who received
a cochlear implant later performed, on average, more poorly than their
normal-hearing peers.
Adding to the evidence that early auditory input is important was the
finding that children who had some level of normal hearing early in life,
before cochlear implantation, exhibited word-learning skills similar to
the early implanted children, Dr. Houston said.
"Taken together, the findings suggest that early access to auditory
input, even if the access to sound is quite impoverished, plays an
important role in acquiring the ability to rapidly learn associations
between spoken words and their meanings," summarized Dr. Houston.
The team used the Intermodal Preferential Looking (IPL) paradigm to
investigate the language ability of the children. The IPL paradigm
requires the child to listen to a repetitive noun while looking at an
object. The child continues to look at the screen that displays the
original object and a second object while the speaker repeats the word
associated with the object. A hidden camera records the movement of the
child's eyes to see if he identifies the correct picture with the object's
correct name.
Dr. Houston and his colleagues are collaborating with other cochlear
implant centers to launch a study with more children to continue the
investigation into the effects of early auditory experience on word
learning.
~~~~~
Other researchers involved in this study include Jessica Stewart, Aaron
Moberly, and Richard T. Miyamoto, MD, of the Department of Otolaryngology
- Head & Neck Surgery, Indiana University; George Hollich, Department of
Psychological Sciences, Purdue University.
The research was funded through grants from the National Institute for
Deafness and Other Communication Disorders and the Deafness Research
Foundation.