Early Neurophysiological Markers of Language Impairments
Early Neurophysiological Markers of Language Impairments: a Longitudinal Study on Infants At Familial Risk
IRCCS Eugenio Medea
100 participants
Feb 21, 2022
OBSERVATIONAL
Conditions
Summary
The present project aims at identifying very early electrophysiological risk markers for language impairments. The long-term goals of the study include the characterization of learning developmental trajectories in children at high risk for language impairments. In this project, all the infants of the Medea BabyLab cohort are followed-up until school age. Since these infants have complete information on early electrophysiological markers, the final goal of the project is the characterization of their learning developmental trajectories and the construction of a multi-factor prognostic model that includes the neurophysiological processes underlying basic-level skills as potential biomarkers for predicting later reading and spelling skills.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria3
- Healthy infants aged \<24 months
- Infants with and without familial risk for language impairments (infants are assigned to the group with familial risk if at least one first-degree relative had a certified (clinical) diagnosis of language impairment or learning disability
- Both parents are native-Italian speakers
Exclusion Criteria4
- Gestational age \< 37 weeks and/or birth weight \< 2500 grams
- APGAR scores at birth at 1' and 5' \< 7
- Bayley Cognitive Score \< 7
- Presence of certified diagnosis of intellectual deficiency, attention-deficit disorder, sensorial and neurological disorders, or autism within first-degree relative
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Interventions
Investigation of early neural markers using electrophysiology at 6-12-24 months
Individual behavioral assessment at later ages (3, 4.5, 6, and 8 years)
Locations(1)
View Full Details on ClinicalTrials.gov
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NCT05767242