Notifications
No Notifications

Welcome to the Neuroarts Resource Center!

Our team will periodically post updates in this space to keep you informed on how the platform is evolving. Thank you for being part of the neuroarts community.

7-9-25: We have launched a new quick tips series to help familiarize NRC community members with the platform's offerings. Click here to watch a short video on how to share NRC content to your social feed!

From searching a growing library of research and programs to engaging directly with peers on the social feed, the Neuroarts Resource Center is designed to help you find inspiration, collaborators, and tools that drive your work forward.

Using music to assist language learning in autistic children with minimal verbal language: The MAP feasibility RCT

March 3rd, 2024
United Kingdom
Tom Loucas, Tim I. Williams, Fang Liu, Jacqueline Sin, Mirjana Jeremic, Sina Meyer, Sam Boseley, Sara Fincham-Majumdar, Georgia Aslett, Ruan Renshaw, Fang Liu
Music has been shown to improve social interaction and attention to verbal stimuli in autism. Authors report a feasibility randomised controlled trial of an online intervention using music-assisted programmes, compared with best-practice treatment (Social Communication Intervention for Pre-schoolers–Intensive) for language learning in preschool autistic children with minimal verbal language.
Autism
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/13623613241233804
Posted byHugo Jimenez

Abstract/Description

Music has been shown to improve social interaction and attention to verbal stimuli in autism. We report a feasibility randomised controlled trial of an online intervention using music-assisted programmes, compared with best-practice treatment (Social Communication Intervention for Pre-schoolers–Intensive) for language learning in preschool autistic children with minimal verbal language. Minimisation randomisation ensured comparability of groups before intervention. Ninety-one people expressed interest in taking part; 27 met eligibility criteria and were randomised to receive either music-assisted programmes or Social Communication Intervention for Pre-schoolers–Intensive. Children and their parent received two 45-min sessions weekly, over 18 weeks, coached online by a speech and language therapist. A smartphone app was developed to support home-based practice between sessions. Over the study period, 20% of participants completed the intervention and assessments of outcome measures. At 3 months post-intervention follow-up, social responsiveness, understanding of words and phrases and number of words spoken and parent–child interaction improved more in the music-assisted programmes than the Social Communication Intervention for Pre-schoolers–Intensive group. The results demonstrate the feasibility of recruiting this population into a randomised controlled trial and the music-assisted programmes had high perceived acceptability highlighted by parent interviews. A full clinical trial to establish music-assisted programmes’ effectiveness in improving early vocabulary learning in autistic children is warranted.

Associated Authors

Associated Organizations

Associated Journals/Periodicals