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Late Onset Canonical Babbling: A Possible Early Marker of Abnormal Development
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1998
Year
Possible Early MarkerLanguage DevelopmentSpeech Sound DisorderLate Canonical BabblingSpeech DisordersDevelopmental SpeechPhoneticsLanguage AcquisitionCanonical BabblingLanguage DisordersLanguage StudiesAbnormal DevelopmentSpeech And Language DisordersHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceSpeech ProductionLanguage DisorderMeaningful SpeechDevelopmental AnomalySpeechlanguage PathologyPediatricsNeuroscienceSpeech PerceptionDevelopmental StutteringLinguistics
By their 10th month of life, typically developing infants produce canonical babbling, which includes the well-formed syllables required for meaningful speech. Research suggests that emerging speech or language-related disorders might be associated with late onset of canonical babbling. Onset of canonical babbling was investigated for 1,536 high-risk infants, at about 10-months corrected age. Parental report by open-ended questionnaire was found to be an efficient method for ascertaining babbling status. Although delays were infrequent, they were often associated with genetic, neurological, anatomical, and/or physiological abnormalities. Over half the cases of late canonical babbling were not, at the time they were discovered associated with prior significant medical diagnoses. Late canonical-babbling onset may be a predictor of later developmental disabilities, including problems in speech, language, and reading.