The Efficacy
of Auditory Integration Training
Summaries and Critiques of
28 Reports
(January, 1993 - May, 2001)
Stephen M. Edelson, Ph.D.
and Bernard Rimland, Ph.D.
Auditory
integration training (AIT), as developed by French otolaryngologist Guy Berard
and based on the work of his predecessor, Alfred Tomatis, typically consists of
20 half-hour sessions of listening to specially modulated music over a 10- to
20-day period.AIT has been reported to
be beneficial in several conditions, including AD/HD, autism, dyslexia, and
hypersensitive hearing at certain frequencies.
The
present review covers 28 reports on AIT.
Twenty-three reports concluded that AIT benefits various population
subgroups, three studies claim to show no benefit (or no benefit over that seen
in a control group), and two studies reported rather ambiguous or contradictory
results.Considering the great
difficulties in both providing a credible placebo treatment and assessing
improvement in the subject populations, these results are quite encouraging.
The balance of the evidence clearly favors AIT as a useful intervention,
especially in autism.
Following
are summaries of all research studies known to us that have investigated the
efficacy of AIT.These studies were
published between January, 1993 and May, 2001 and have appeared in
peer-reviewed journals, professional newsletters, and/or were presented at
professional conferences.Twenty-six of
the studies utilized subjects with autism, attention deficit/hyper-activity
disorder, central auditory processing disorder, and/or mental retardation. Two of
the studies evaluated the physiological effects of AIT on animals.
Section
A of the paper summarizes those studies supporting the efficacy of AIT; Section
B summaries those studies that claim to have found no support for its efficacy;
and Section C summarizes the results of two studies which we have classified
‘ambiguous, contradictory, or controversial.’
Following these three sections, Section D, we discuss two additional
reports in a Discussion section, followed by our Conclusions.
The
summaries are listed chronologically within each disorder. All used Berard-type equipment and
procedures.(We are not aware of any
relevant research using the Tomatis approach during the time period
covered.)
The
following abbreviations are used for the tests/checklists utilized most often
in the studies:Aberrant Behavior
Checklist (ABC-1), Autism Behavior Checklist (ABC-2), Behavior Summarized
Evaluation (BSE), Childhood Autism Rating Scale (CARS), Clinical Evaluation of
Language Fundamentals--Revised (CELF-R), Conner’s Parent Rating Scales (CPRS),
Fisher’s Auditory Problems Checklist (FAPC), Screening Test for Auditory Processing
Disorders (SCAN), Self-Injurious Behavior Questionnaire (SIBQ), Staggered
Spondaic Word (SSW), and the Test of Nonverbal Intelligence (TONI).
Section A -- Studies Reporting Positive Effects of AIT (N=23)
AUTISM STUDIES
(1) Ocular Movements Among Individuals
with Autism Pre- and Post-Auditory Integration Training
Margaret
P. Creedon in collaboration with Stephen M. Edelson and Janice E. Scharre
Easter
Seals Therapeutic Day School, Autism Research Institute, and Illinois College
of Optometry
Paper presented at the
Annual Conference of the Association for the Advancement of Behavioral Therapy,
New York, 1993.
In an open-clinical study, visual tracking movements
and optokinetic nystagmus (a visual reflex) were assessed in 22 autistic
individuals, ages 6 to 13 years, prior to, immediately following, and three
months after AIT.Significant
improvements were seen in horizontal tracking immediately following AIT and in
both horizontal and vertical tracking three months post AIT.No changes were seen in optokinetic
nystagmus.
Parents completed the FAPC
and the ABC-1. The FAPC indicated significant improvement at 3 months post-AIT,
and the ABC-1 indicated significant improvement both immediately following and
3 months post-AIT.
Comment.
This was an open-clinical study with no control group for
comparison.
(2)Study of the Effects of AIT
in Autism
Dawn
Cortez-McKee and Jaak Panksepp
Bowling
Green State University, Ohio
Paper
presented at the Annual NW Ohio Autism Society Conference, 1993.
This open-trial
clinical study utilized 33 autistic individuals.Participants were assessed using multiple measures prior to (two
baseline measures), and at 1-week, 1-month, and 3 months following AIT. The
measures included: ABC-1, BSE, CARS, CPRS, FAPC, and SIBQ.
Significant improvement was seen on all of
the measures, except the FAPC, at the one- and three-month follow-up assessment
periods.
Comment. This study was also
an open-clinical trial with no control group for comparison.
(3 & 4) Two Studies of the Effects of Auditory Integration Training
in Autism
Tina
K. Veale
Comprehensive
Concepts in Speech and Hearing, Cincinnati, Ohio
Paper
Presented at the International ASA Conference on Autism, Toronto, Canada, 1993.
Study I. In a
double-blind placebo pilot study, five autistic subjects participated in the
experimental group and five in the control group. Parents completed three different evaluation forms--the ABC-1,
the CPRC, and the FAPC. These
instruments were completed prior to, one month following, and three months
following AIT.There were no initial
differences between the experimental and control groups, but positive trends
indicating improvement in the experimental group were seen at three months
following AIT for all three evaluation forms.
Study II. This was
an open clinical study involving 46 autistic participants.
Parents completed the ABC-1, CPRS, FAPC as
well as the Autistic Behavior Composite Checklist and Profile.
Significant improvements were observed at
one month and six months following AIT.
Some of the behavioral changes included: reductions in hyperactivity,
social withdrawal, auditory problems, restlessness, and anxiety.
Comment.
Study I included a control-placebo group,
but there were only five subjects in each group. Given this small number, it is not surprising that, despite the
benefits seen, there were no significant differences between the two
groups.Study II which did find
significant pre- and post-treatment differences was an open-clinical trial and
did not include a placebo-group.
(5)The Effects of Auditory
Integration Training in Autism
Bernard Rimland and Stephen
M. Edelson
Autism Research Institute,
San Diego, California
American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology
, 1994, 5, 16-24.
This study
involved an open-clinical research design which included several experimental
control measures.There were 445
autistic subjects in the study, with ages ranging from 4 to 41 years.
A significant reduction in sound sensitivity
was found, based on the presentation of pure tones prior to and immediately
following the AIT sessions. Analyses of the hearing tests conducted prior to,
after 5 hours of listening, and after 10 hours of listening, showed hearing
acuity to have improved slightly while the amount of variability within the
audiogram decreased. Subjects were
also assigned at random to one of several filtering conditions (e.g., filter
auditory peaks, no filters, filter painful frequencies). No differences in the
efficacy of the AIT were found among the filtering conditions.
Parents
completed several different questionnaires on a monthly basis for 9
months.These included the ABC-1, CPRS,
and the FAPC.The responses to these
behavioral measures indicated a sharp reduction in problem behaviors, starting
one month following the AIT listening sessions. These changes remained stable throughout the entire 9 months of
post-AIT evaluations.
Participants
were assigned at random to one of three different AIT devices.
No differences were found in the efficacy of
the devices.
Correlational
analyses were employed to attempt to develop a profile of those individuals who
may benefit from AIT. Lower functioning individuals displayed significantly
greater improvement, as indicated by the ABC-1 and the CPRS.
No
significant relationships were found between behavioral improvement and age,
degree of sound sensitivity, and the amount of variability in the pre-AIT
audiogram.
Comment. Although a placebo group was
not employed in this research project, the study did include several experimental
controls, such as videotape raters who were ‘blind’ to before/after conditions,
and random assignment to filter conditions and to AIT devices.
(6) Positron Emission
Tomography Measure of Modified Auditory Integration Therapy:
A Case Study
Jacqueline M. Cimorelli and
Melanie K. Highfill
University of North Carolina
at Greensboro & Center for the Dev. of Comm. and Learning, Winston-Salem,
NC
Presented at the ASA
National Conference, Las Vegas, 1994.
Reported in ADVANCE for Speech-Language Pathologists and
Audiologists, June 26, 1995.
A
single-subject research design investigated changes in brain functioning
following AIT using Positron Emissions Test (PET) Scan technology.
The research subject was an 8-year old male
with mental retardation and autism.PET
scans were conducted prior to a second set of AIT listening sessions
(baseline), one day after the listening sessions, and
six months later. The results at both the one-day and six-month
follow-up evaluations indicated a normalization of brain wave activity,
including a decrease in hyper-metabolism in the frontal lobe and an increase in
activity in the occipital lobe.
Comment. Although these results are encouraging, this study involved only
one subject; and there was no control subject for comparison.
Additionally, a PET scan had not been given
prior to the first set of AIT sessions; thus, the baseline information used in
the research study may not be an appropriate measure for comparison.
(7)Changes in Unilateral and
Bilateral Sound Sensitivity as a Result of AIT
Deborah
Woodward
Woodward
Audiology, McLeansville, NC
The Sound Connection
, 1994, 2, p.4.
Loudness
tolerance was investigated in 60 children with autism and related
disorders.Uncomfortable loudness level
(UCL) measurements were performed prior to and immediately following AIT.
Prior to AIT, the results from the left and
right monaural presentations (to each ear independently) as well as the
binaural presentation (to both ears simultaneously) were much lower than 90
dBHTL, where 90 dBHTL is considered a normal lower limit of UCL.
Furthermore, the binaural tolerance to the
speech noise was 9 to 11 dBHTL less than the monaural tolerance level, where 3
to 6 dBHTL is considered normal.
Following AIT, the monaural tolerance level to each ear increased 13 to
15 dBHTL, but overall, the monaural and binaural tolerance levels were lower
than normal.This increased tolerance
to speech noise was statistically significant.
In addition, the binaural tolerance level was only 5 dBHTL lower than
the monaural sound presentations, indicating a more normal response.
Comment. This study involved a
relatively large number of subjects; however, the study did not employ a
control group.
(8) Parental Perceptions of
Change Following AIT for Autism
Dana
Monville and Nickola Nelson
Western
Michigan University
Paper
presented at the American Speech-Language-Hearing Conference, New Orleans,
1994.
A survey was
mailed to 150 parents of children diagnosed with either autism or pervasive
developmental disorder whose children had received AIT between 1991 and
1993.Forty parents (27%) responded to
the survey.Of those who responded, 25
(63%) reported an increase in attention span; 25 (63%) reported a decrease in
sound sensitivity; and 12 (30%) reported an increase in language.
Four parents (10%) reported an increase in
tantrums and aggression.
Comment. Although the survey
was sent to 150 families, only 27% responded to the survey. It is possible that
those who observed positive changes in their children were more likely to
complete the survey than those who did not observe any changes.
(9)
Auditory Integration Training
Jane
R. Madell and Darrell E. Rose
Long
Island College Hospital, Brooklyn, NY; and Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, FL
American Journal of Audiology
, March, 1994, 14-18.
This study involved an open
clinical trial of AIT on four children.
Their diagnoses included: autism, PDD, and learning disabilities.
Audiograms of all four children showed improvement
following AIT (i.e., a decrease in variability).
Behavioral improvement was observed in three of the four
children.The benefits reported were:
increased calmness, decreased sound sensitivity,
and improvements in speech/language and word recognition in
noise.
Comment.
Although this report included a great deal
of clinical detail, only four subjects participated in the study; and there was
no control group.
(10)Auditory Integration
Training: A Pilot Study
Bernard Rimland and Stephen
M. Edelson
Autism Research Institute,
San Diego, California
Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders,
1995, 25, 61-70.
The study
utilized a blind-placebo controlled experimental design.
Eight subjects were assigned at random to
the experimental (AIT) group, and 9 were assigned to the placebo group. The
placebo group listened to the same, but unprocessed, music. Three months
following AIT, significant improvements were observed on the ABC-1 and the
FAPC. Although there were no changes in sound sensitivity nor changes in the
audiogram, the majority of subjects had not been reported to be sound
sensitive, nor were they able to be tested audiometrically.
Comment. Although the
subjects were assigned at random to the AIT and placebo groups, there were
initial differences between the two groups.
Regression analysis suggested the effects observed were not artifacts of
the initial differences.
(11) Epileptic Activity in
Autism and Acquired Aphasia: A Study Using Magneto-Encephalography
Jeffrey
D. Lewine, Sherri L. Provencal, John T. Davis, and William W. Orrison, Jr.
Department
of Radiology, School of Medicine, University of Utah Medical School
Paper
presented at the Autism Society of America National Conference, Orlando,
Florida, 1997
Magnetoencephalography
and EEG recordings were used to measure electrical activity in the brain in one
child with dyslexia and one high-functioning autistic adult.
Baseline recordings demonstrated larger than
normal responses in the areas associated with hyperacusis.
Following AIT, a more normalized balance or
symmetry in electrical activity was observed.
Comment.
These findings document physiological
changes due to AIT; however, there were only two subjects in the study and no
control group.
(12) Auditory Integration Training:
A Double-Blind Study of Behavioral, Electro-physiological, and
Audiometric Effects in Autistic Subjects
Stephen
M. Edelson, Deborah Arin, Margaret Bauman, Scott E. Lukas, Jane H. Rudy,
Michelle Sholar, and Bernard Rimland
Autism
Research Institute, San Diego, CA;
Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA; McLean Hospital, Belmont,
MA; and Upper Valley Medical Centers, Troy, OH
Focus
on Autism and Other Developmental Disabilities
, 1999, 14, 73-81.
Nineteen
autistic subjects were assigned at random to either the experimental group
(n=9), which listened to AIT-processed music, or a placebo group (n=10), which
listened to the same, but unprocessed, music.
All evaluations were ‘blind’ to group assignment.
Behavioral, electro-physiological, and
audiometric measures were assessed prior to and following AIT.
Behavioral:
A significant improvement was observed in behavioral problems (using the
ABC-1) in the experimental group at the 3-month follow-up assessment.
Electrophysiological:
Of the 19 subjects, three experimental group
and two placebo group subjects were able to cooperate with the auditory P300
Event Related Potential (ERP) task.All
five subjects showed abnormal P300 ERPs prior to the AIT listening
sessions.Three months following AIT,
all three subjects showed a dramatic improvement in their auditory P300
ERP.No improvement was seen in the
placebo group.Audiometric:
The subjects' poor communication and
attention skills precluded formal statistical evaluation of the data from a
battery of audiometric tests; however, an audiologist was able to assign
correctly 10 of the 15 subjects for whom partial data were available to the
treated and non-treated groups, on a ‘blind’ basis.
Comment.
AIT was reported to produce both behavioral
improvement and normalization of brain wave activity. The behavioral changes on
the ABC-1 are consistent with those obtained in a previous study (Rimland &
Edelson, 1995, Section A, #10).
Although the electrophysiological findings are encouraging, they are
based on a total of only five subjects.
(13) Auditory Integration
Training and Autism: Two Case Studies
Mark Morgan Brown
Private Practitioner,
Republic of Ireland
British Journal of
Occupational Therapy mso-bidi-font-size:
10.0pt'>, 1999, 62, 13-18.
This is a
clinical study of two autistic siblings, a 5-year old male and a 3 1/2-year old
female. Observations were made at three and six months following AIT.
Improvements were reported in attention,
arousal and sensory modulation, balance and movement perception, praxis and
sequencing, speech and language, social and emotional maturity, and eye
control.
Comment.
Although this study provided detailed
descriptions of subjects prior to and after AIT, it involved only two subjects
and no control group for comparison.
Attention
Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Reports
(14) Non-Pharmacological
Techniques in the Treatment of Brain Dysfunction
Jeffrey
M. Gerth, Steve A. Barton, Harold F. Engler, Alyne C. Heller, David Freides,
and
Jane
Blalock
Georgia
Institute of Technology, Emory University, and the Atlanta Speech School
Technical
Report prepared for the GTRI Fellows Council, Georgie Tech Research Institute,
Georgia Institute of Technology, June, 1994.
This study evaluated the effectiveness of AIT on 10
children with auditory-based learning deficits. Eight of the ten had also been diagnosed as having Attention
Deficit Disorder.Subjects were given a
series of diagnostic tests, and parents were requested to complete several
questionnaires. Two subscales from the Woodcock-Johnson Psycho-Educational Battery
test were used to evaluate changes in auditory processing.
These subscales, the Sound Blending scale
and the Incomplete Words scale, indicated an improvement of one standard
deviation or more in 4 of the 10 subjects, and moderate improvement in two other
subjects.Performance on other criteria
(e.g., CPRS and the FAPC) “could not be meaningfully evaluated, given the
amount of missing data.”
Comment.
Although improvement was reported in 6 of
the 10 subjects, there was no control group.
(15)
Auditory Processing Skills and Auditory
Integration Training in Children with ADD
Donna
Geffner, Jay R. Lucker, Ann Gordon and Dolores A. DiStasio
St.
John's University, Jamaica, NY and Ann Gordon Associates, Stony Brook, NY
Paper
Presented at the Annual Convention of the American-Speech-Language Hearing
Association, New Orleans, 1994
This study investigated changes in audition and
language in 16 children with AD/HD.A
large number of tests were employed to evaluate possible changes as a result of
AIT.The measures included:
standard audiometric threshold testing,
tolerance for tones and speech, speech recognition in quiet and noise
conditions, and the Goldman-Fristoe-Woodcock (GFW) Test of Auditory Selective
Attention.Post-assessments were
conducted within 3 months following AIT.
Significant improvement was observed in the subjects' tolerance to tones
and speech, speech recognition in the noise condition, and in listening skills
as measured by the GFW Auditory Selective Attention Test and several subscales
from the Detroit Test of Learning Aptitude (oral commissions, attention span
for unrelated words, and attention span for related words).
Comment.
No control group was utilized in this study.
(16) Long-Term Effects of
AIT Comparing Treated and Non-Treated Children
Donna
Geffner, Jay R. Lucker, and Ann Gordon
St.
John's University, Jamaica, NY; and Ann Gordon Associates, Commack, NY
Paper
Presented at the Annual Convention of the American Speech-Language-Hearing
Association, Seattle, 1996.
The study involved a one-year follow-up evaluation
of children with Attention Deficit Disorder.
Those receiving AIT (n=10) were compared to a control group (n=10) which
did not receive AIT.Using a tolerance
testing procedure for 'uncomfortable' listening levels, improvement of 6 dB in
the left ear was observed for the AIT group, but no change was observed in
those in the control group. No differences were found between the two groups
with respect to listening to 'comfortable' speech.
Additionally, tests evaluating speech recognition in noise and
auditory-language processing showed improvement for those in the AIT group but
not for those in the control group.
Comment.
Although a control group was used in this
study, those in the control group did not receive a placebo treatment that
would have controlled for the possibility of a ‘placebo effect.’
(17) The Effects of Auditory
Integration Training on Children Diagnosed with Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity
Disorder: A Pilot Study
Wayne J. Kirby
University of North Carolina
at Asheville
Paper presented at the First
Annual Congress of International Association of Berard Practitioners, Antwerp,
Belgium, 2000.
The Sound Connection
, 2000, Vol. 7, pp. 4
& 5.
This study employed a placebo-control design in
which five children listened to AIT-processed music and five children listened
to the same, but unprocessed, music.
Subjects were assessed using the Auditory Continuous Performance Test
(ACPT) prior to and three months following the experimental/placebo listening
sessions. The ACPT provides measures for impulsivity and inattention and also
includes a 'total number of errors' score.
Comparison of the two groups at three months post-AIT indicated a
statistically significant reduction in the total number of errors for those in
the AIT group.Improvement was also
observed on the impulsivity and inattention scores for the AIT group, but these
results were not significantly different from the results obtained from the
placebo group.
Comment.
Although a placebo group was utilized in this study, there were only five
subjects in each group.
Central
Auditory Processing Disorder (CAPD) Reports
(18)
The Effects of Auditory Integration Therapy
on Central Auditory Processing
Brenda
Huskey, Kathryn Barnett, and Jacqueline M. Cimorelli
University
of North Carolina at Greensboro
Paper
presented at the American Speech-Language-Hearing Conference, New Orleans,
1994.
In an experimental study, two auditory processing
tasks were administered to six subjects in the AIT treatment group and six
subjects in a control group.These
tasks included the SSW test and the Phonemic Synthesis Test (PST).
Pre- and post-tests were given prior to, and
at 4 to 6 weeks, and at 8 to 12 weeks following AIT.
For the SSW test, there were no improvements in the subjects 4 to
6 weeks following AIT, but there were improvements on the total score and on
the left competing condition at 8 to 12 weeks following AIT.
There were no changes in the results from
the PST.
Comment.
Although a control group was employed, there
were only six subjects in each group.
Additionally, the control group did not receive a placebo treatment to
permit evaluation of the possibility of a ‘placebo-effect.’
(19)
Clinical Outcome Evaluation: Auditory
Integration Training mso-bidi-font-size:
10.0pt'>
Jane
H. Rudy, Sharon S. Morgan, and Marianne Shepard
Upper
Valley Medical Centers, Troy, Ohio
Paper
presented at the Ohio Speech-Language-Hearing Conference, 1994.
In an open-clinical study, 13 subjects diagnosed
with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and/or central auditory
processing dysfunction (CAPD) were given a variety of assessments prior to,
immediately following, and three months post-AIT.
These tests examined hearing acuity, central auditory processing
(SSW, SCAN), auditory evoked potentials (i.e., brain waveforms--P200 and P300),
language function (CELF-R), and intelligence (TONI).
Immediately following AIT, there were significant improvements in
the SSW, SCAN, and CELF-R, and no change in the TONI.
Three-months post-AIT, there was additional improvements in the
SSW and CELF-R, but no further change in the SCAN.
There was also a significant improvement in the TONI.
An analysis of the P200 waveform indicated a
significant change in amplitude but no change in the P300 waveform latency. No
significant changes in hearing acuity were detected during any of the
assessments.
Comment. This was an
open-clinical study, and there was no control group.
Studies Investigating Mixed
Populations
(20) Auditory Integration
Training: One Clinician's View
Jane R. Madell
Long Island College Hospital and State University of New York,
Brooklyn
Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools
, 1999, 30, 371-377.
Changes
in speech perception were evaluated in several disorders prior to and following
AIT.The populations included: autism,
pervasive developmental disorder (PDD), multisystem developmental disorder
(n=46), attention deficit disorder or attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder
(n=26), and central auditory processing disorder with leaning disabilities
(CAPD/LD, n=46).Subjects' speech
perception was assessed by asking them to
recognize words in both quiet and competing noise environments.
Improvement in speech perception was documented in both the quiet and noise
conditions following AIT.In a second
part of this study, uncomfortable loudness thresholds (UCLS) were
evaluatedin individuals diagnosed with
autism (n=24), PDD (n=26), and CAPD (n=10).
UCLs also improved in these children following AIT.
Comment.
This is an excellent clinical study with many subjects and multiple
measures of change.However, a control
group was not used for comparison.
(21)
A Comparative Study of the Earducator and
the AudioKinetron
Sally Brockett
IDEA Training Center, North
Haven, Connecticut
The Sound Connection
, 2001, 8, 1 & 6.
This study compared the effects of two Berard AIT
devices--the Earducator and the AudioKinetron.
A total of 19 children diagnosed with
autism, learning disabilities and attention deficit disorder
participated in this study. The children were assigned at random to either the
Earducator or the AudioKinetron; and the evaluators, the parents, were ‘blind’
to group assignment. The ABC-1 and the Attention Deficit Disorders Evaluation
Scale were used to assess changes.The
results showed improvement in both groups of children and no differences
between the two AIT devices.
Comment
. Although the aim of this study was to compare two Berard AIT
devices, a placebo group would have also provided additional information
regarding the effectiveness of the two AIT devices.
Reports of
Animal Studies
(22)
An Animal Model of Auditory Integration
Training
M.
Waldhoer, J. Panksepp, D. Pruitt, M. Vaningan, D. McKee, J. Rossi III, and J.
Lindsey
Bowling
Green State University & Toxicology, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base
Paper
presented at the Annual Society for Neuroscience Convention, San Diego, 1995.
This study was undertaken to follow up the positive
findings seen in an earlier study on autistic children conducted by these
authors (see Section A, #2).AIT was
administered to newborn domestic chicks, selected as the species of choice
because of their responsivity to sounds.
Starting at two days of age, subjects were included in one of three
groups--AIT (experimental), music (control 1, same music as the AIT group but
not processed), and silence (control 2).
Following AIT, those in the experimental group exhibited an increase in
growth and a reduced inhibition to separation-induced vocalizations in response
to music.Post-mortem analysis of the
brain tissue indicated a reduction in serotonin and 5-HIAA levels in the two
music groups (experimental and control 1).
In addition, an analysis ofthe
behavioral effect of cyproheptadine, a general serotonin antagonist, yielded
comparable behavioral effects.The data
suggest that AIT may modify serotonergic tone in the brain.
Comment.
Although behavior changes were observed in chicks who received AIT,
neurochemical changes were found both in the AIT and placebo-music groups
(control 1).
(23)
Biochemical Changes As a Result of AIT-type Modulated and Unmodulated Music
Jaak
Panksepp, John Ross III, and T.K. Narayanan
Bowling
Green State University, Ohio
Lost & Found:
Perspectives on Brain, Emotion, and Culture , 1996/7, Vol. 2, p. 1 & 4.
This experiment involved four conditions in which
groups of chicks were exposed to either AIT-type modulated music (using the
EASe Disc 1, produced by Vision Audio, Inc., Joppa, MD); unmodulated music (the
same music source but not processed); human voices (male and female); or no
sound.For both the modulated and
unmodulated conditions, neurochemical assays indicated a dramatic increase in
norepinephrine and its principle metabolite, MHPG.
The researchers also found increases in brain dopamine and its
metabolite (HVA), but these changes were not as large.
No clear changes were observed in brain
serotonin and epinephrine.Very little
change was observed for those included in the 'human voice' and 'no sound'
conditions.
Comment.
Changes were not observed in the human voice
condition(placebo group) and no sound
conditions, but neurochemical changes were found in the modulated condition
(AIT group) and the unmodulated condition (placebo group).
These findings indicate that listening to
music produced neurochemical changes.
Section B -- Studies Purporting
AIT to be Ineffective (N=3)
Autism Reports
(1) Auditory Integration
Training for Children with Autism: No Behavioral Effects Detected
Oliver C. Mudford, Barbara
A. Cross, S. Breen, Chris Cullen, David Reeves, Judith Gould,
and Jo Douglas
Keele University, University
of Manchester, and UK National Autistic Society
American Journal of Mental
Retardation,
2000, 105, 118-129.
In
a double-blind crossover design, 16 autistic children were evaluated for a
4-month period.Several measures were
used in this study including: parent and teacher rating scales (ABC-1, Nisonger
Child Behavior Rating Form), direct observations (stereotypy, object obsessive,
disruptive behaviors, stigmatising behaviors, vocal stereotypy),
intelligence/cognitive testing (Leiter International Performance Scale),
speech-language evaluation (Reynell Developmental Language Scales III),
social/adaptive behavior (Vineland Adaptive Behavior Composite), standard
audiometric testing, and parent reports.
Improvements were observed in both the AIT group and the placebo group
on adaptive/social behavior and expressive language.
Statistically significant improvements in hyperactivity and ear
occlusion were observed in thesubjects
who participated in the placebo condition.
Comment.
Although the significant improvements seen in those in the placebo condition
were dismissed by the authors, it is quite possible that these improvements may
have been due to the subjects having received AIT eight months earlier (i.e.,
they may have participated in the AIT group prior to the crossover).
This is a real possibility given:
(a) the two areas of improvement in the
placebo group are consistent with findings associated with AIT; and (b) Rimland
and Edelson (1994, see Section A, #5) and Gillberg et al. (1997, see Section C,
#2) documented improvement up to 9 months following AIT.
The present authors called this possibility
to Mudford’s attention and suggested that the data be reanalyzed to test it.
Mudford refused, claiming that additional
analyses of the data would increase the likelihood of error. On the contrary,
reanalysis of the data would have decreased the likelihood of
error.Here we see an eagerness to
declare AIT ineffective when the data do not necessarily support such a
conclusion.
Central Auditory
Processing Problems (CAPD) Reports
(2) The Effects of Auditory
Integration Training for Children with Central Auditory Processing Disorder
(CAPD)
Karen
A. Yencer
State
University of New York at Buffalo
Doctoral
Dissertation, 1996; American Journal of Audiology, 1998, 7,
32-44.
Thirty-six children diagnosed with central auditory
processing disorder participated in an experimental condition (i.e., listened
to AIT music), a placebo condition (i.e., listened to unmodulated music), or a
control condition (i.e., did not listen to music).
Children with autism, pervasive developmental disorder (PDD), and
multiple-handicaps were excluded from the study.
A battery of tests were administered to the subjects prior to and
one month following the listening sessions.
These included: standard audiometric testing, the SSW test, the Phonemic
Synthesis test, the Standard Progressive Matrices test, FAPC, auditory
brainstem response (ABR), event-related potential (P300), and a speech-in-noise
test.The P300 analyses indicated some
improvement in the AIT condition (mean latency from 366.2 msec. to 348.5 msec.)
versus a slight worsening in the placebo condition (mean latency from 400.8
msec. to 402.2 msec.).Significant improvements
were found for the three conditions on all measures except the speech-in-noise
test.
Comment.
Yencer examined changes following AIT after
only four weeks following the AIT sessions.
Stephen M. Edelson, who consulted on this study, noting that Berard and
others had stated a need for at least 3 months of follow-up, insisted that she
examine changes for at least three months following the AIT sessions.
However, Yencer chose to conduct follow-up
measures for only one-month because of her dissertation schedule.
Cutting corners may be acceptable in meeting
academic requirements, but not acceptable where decisions affecting the welfare
of handicapped children are concerned.
Note that Huskey, Barnett, and Cimorelli (1994) investigated AIT on a
similar population (i.e., CAPD) and found no improvement at 4 to 6 weeks
following AIT, but did observe improvement at 6 to 8 weeks post-AIT (see
Section A, #18).
Studies Investigating Mixed
Populations
(3) The Efficacy of Auditory Integration Training: A Double Blind Study
William
Zollweg, Vere Vance, and David Palm
University
of Wisconsin at La Crosse; Research Associates, Inc.; and Gundersen Lutheran
Hospital
American Journal of Audiology
, 1997, 6, 39-47
The study involved a double-blind research design
involving 30 participants who were assigned at random to either an experimental
(AIT) group or a placebo-control group. The participants were 7 to 24 years
old, and the majority carried diagnoses of mild to profound mental retardation.
Some of the participants were diagnosed as having autism. Evaluations were
conducted using audiometric tests, a Loudness Discomfort Level test, and the
ABC-1 at 3, 6, and 9 months following AIT.
Although no differences were found between the AIT and control groups
with respect to hearing and behavioral changes, both groups showed
improvements. The results from the Loudness Discomfort Level test indicated
that the control group had a higher tolerance for the frequency 250 Hertz than
the AIT group at the 9-month post-assessment measure.
Comment.
There are several severe problems with this
study.First, the title should have
stated “… in a Mixed Population” since fewer than a third of the subjects were
autistic; thus one cannot generalize these findings to the autism population.
Neither Berard, nor any other responsible
investigator, has proposed AIT as a treatment for mental retardation.
Second, the volume level was much higher
than recommended.The recommended
volume level is 80 dB SPL or lower.The
decibel level in the Zollweg et al. study was measured as high as 122 dB
SPL.Finally, an analysis of the
audiograms indicated that 27% were given the wrong narrow band filters.
Given the methodological flaws, these
findings are not applicable even to the mentally retarded population.
Section C:
Studies Presenting Ambiguous, Controversial,
and/or Contradictory Findings (N=2)
(1) The Long-Term Effects of
Auditory Training on Children with Autism
Sue
Bettison
Autism
Research Institute, Sydney, Australia
Journal of Autism and
Developmental Disorders , 1996, 26, 361-374.
“Eighty children, 3-17 years of age, with autism or
Asperger syndrome and mild to severe distress in the presence of some sounds,
were randomly allocated to two groups.
The experimental group received auditory training and the control group
listened to the same unmodified music under the same conditions.
Significant improvements in behavior and
severity of autism were maintained for 12 months by both groups.
Informal data suggested that a range of
abnormal responses to sound and other sensory abnormalities may also have
improved.Verbal and performance IQ
increased significantly 3 to 12 months after interventions.
Findings suggest that some aspect of both
auditory training and listening to selected unmodified music may have a
beneficial effect on children with autism and sound sensitivity, …”
[Author Abstract]
Comment:
The results indicated significant
improvement in both the experimental (AIT) and placebo groups, but there were
no differences between the two groups.
Bettison attributed these improvements to listening
to music in a structured environment.
However, critics have interpreted these findings as evidence of ‘no
benefits’ associated with AIT, which is a debatable point.
While
this is an exemplary study in many respects, the instruments used to assess
changes associated with AIT had severe shortcomings. One of the primary measures used to investigate changes in sound
sensitivity was a modified version of the Hearing Sensitivity Questionnaire (HSQ)
designed by Rimland and Edelson (1991). The HSQ was designed only as a
survey of sound sensitivity in the autism population and not an
instrument to evaluate treatment effectiveness. Rimland and Edelson did not use it as an assessment measure in
any of their three studies on AIT.
Additionally, Bettison employed a scoring method for the HSQ that was
said to provide a measure of the person’s degree of sound sensitivity. This
scoring method lacks even face validity (i.e., the appearance that the
checklist is valid).For example, if a
parent agreed with the item: ‘Have there been certain sounds which the person
does not seem to hear?,’ this response was considered an indication of hypersensitivity
to sounds rather than hyposensitivity to sounds.
Another
measure used in the study, the Developmental Behavior Checklist, had been used
previously in clinical settings, but it was also not designed to measure
treatment effectiveness.When
evaluating the efficacy of an intervention, it is crucial that the appropriate
measurement tools be used.
(2) Auditory Integration Training in Children with Autism: Brief Report of
an
Open Pilot Study
Christopher
Gillberg, Maria Johansson, Suzanne Steffenberg, and Orjan Berlin
Autism
, 1997, 1, 97-100
Nine children with "an autistic disorder"
were given AIT for 10 days, in accordance with the procedure recommended by Guy
Berard.No control group nor control
procedure was used.At the end of the
9-month follow-up period, 8 of the 9 children showed improvement on the Autism
Behavior Checklist (ABC) total score, and 7 of 9 children showed improvement on
the ABC sensory subscale.Rimland and
Edelson calculated the significance level of the differences, using standard
matched paired t-tests and derived a p<.01 level for the ABC total
score and p<.02 for the sensory score (“
mso-bidi-font-size:8.0pt'>Auditory integration training
in children with autism [Letter to the Editor],” 1998, Autism, 2,
91-92).
Comment.
This study has several serious
problems.Gillberg relied on two diagnostic
checklists to measure changes as a result of AIT, the CARS and the ABC-2.
Neither checklist was designed to evaluate
treatment effectiveness.Additionally,
despite the small sample size (only 9 cases), Gillberg et al. required an alpha
level of .005 to test for statistical significance instead of the usual .05 and
.01 level.This extremely low, very
conservative alpha level is uncommon in research. Its use in a small sample
study virtually guarantees that no treatment will be found
effective.As a result, Gillberg et al.
(1997) erroneously concluded that no benefits were seen in their study on
AIT.In response to Rimland and
Edelson’s (1998) ‘Letter to the Editor,’ protesting Gillberg et al.’s
statistical analyses, Gillberg et al. (1998) stated
“… a moderate reduction in sensory problems may have occurred” (p.
94; “ mso-bidi-font-size:8.0pt'>Auditory
integration training in children with autism: reply to Rimland and Edelson
[Letter to the Editor],” Autism, 1998, 2, 93-94).
Contrary
to what Gillberg et al. concluded, the results were definitely positive.
The failure to include a control group is
unfortunate, but should not result in understating the value of AIT.
Section D:
Tabulation of Studies, Discussion and Conclusion
Table 1: Tabulation of
Studies
(Number of Studies)
|
Disorders
|
Positive Findings
|
Ambiguous, Controversial,
&/or Contradictory
|
Results Unclear/
Questionable
|
No Effectsa
|
|
Autism
|
13
|
1 (Bettison)
1 (Gillberg)
|
1 (Mudford et al.)
|
0
|
|
ADHD
|
4
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
|
CAPD
|
2
|
0
|
1
(Yencer)
|
0
|
|
Several
Populations
|
2
|
0
|
1 (Zollweg et al.)
|
0
|
|
Animals
(chicks)
|
2
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
a
Note that
none of the studies failed to show discernible benefits.
Of the 28 research studies that evaluated
physiological, behavioral, and cognitive changes in the subjects, the authors
of 23 (82%) studies concluded that their data supported the efficacy of AIT,
three (11%) claimed to have found no evidence of efficacy, and two (7%) report
ambiguous, contradictory results.
Negative
Bias
We recognize at the outset that no research study is
perfect--all have flaws and shortcomings of various kinds.
However, the 23 studies with positive
outcomes, by and large, exhibited fewer and less serious shortcomings than the
subset of three supposedly negative studies.
All three of these studies demonstrated an alarming bias favoring
negative results [Mudford et al. (Section B, #1), Yencer (Section B, #2); and
Zollweg et al. (Section B, #3)].
Two additional published reports
clearly show a negative bias regarding AIT by some researchers.
In a ‘Letter to the Editor’ entitled “When
is a significant change not significant?,”
Patricia Howlin criticized a
controlled-placebo AIT study (Rimland and Edelson, 1995, Section A, #10) by
stating that the statistically significant differences on two measures were
clinically not important (Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders
, 1997, 27,
347-348). Howlin’s criticisms were based on her misunderstandings. She
stated “Thus, the mean fall in the ABC score was less than 0.4 points; hardly a
dramatic change in a scale of 58 items” (page 348). Howlin assumed that the maximum possible score on the ABC-1 was
58; however, the maximum possible score was only 3. Thus, the difference of almost 0.4 points is a meaningful
proportion of the 0 to 3 range and is clinically significant.
Regarding another measure, Howlin stated
that a 12-point difference on the 93-item FAPC was also not clinically
important.Howlin was wrong again.
The FAPC contains 25 items, not 93 items;
thus, an average change on 12 of 25 items is quite dramatic and clinically
significant.Again, the results were
positive, not negative.
In
another report, Rankovic,
Rabinowitz, and Lof (1996) measured the sound output levels of a single
AudioKinetron, as reportedly used by a local AIT practitioner (American Journal of Speech-Language
Pathology, 5, 68-72).
The highest output level used by the
practitioner was measured at 110 dB SPL, and the maximum output level of the
AIT device was measured at 118 dB SPL.
The authors concluded that these output levels can be harmful to
hearing, and warned that AIT is potentially dangerous.
However, an AIT device, like any radio, compact disc or audiocassette player, can
be set to play too loudly.Should all
be banned as potentially dangerous?
Every practitioner is aware of his/her responsibility to make sure that
the device is played at an appropriate level. Basing conclusions on a single,
very probably atypical case, is a poor practice—the authors’ conclusions are
not justified.
A good deal of what has been written about AIT is
excessively skeptical, negative or derogatory, permeated with the assumption
that AIT is ineffective.Our review of
all the research on the efficacy of AIT that we have been able to find refutes
this negative view.
Probably because AIT lacks a plausible rationale and
is counter-intuitive, it has become the target of skepticism and of negatively
biased research.One’s opinion about an
intervention, like one’s opinion about an individual, should be based on
evidence rather than prejudice.The
present authors were themselves skeptical when first learning about AIT.
Their interest was stimulated, despite their
initial skepticism, by a number of almost-too-good-to-be-true clinical reports
from parents of autistic children who had been treated at Dr. Guy Berard’s
clinic in Annecy, France.There is a
place for skepticism, but there is also a place for safe, non-intrusive,
short-term and relatively inexpensive therapies with reasonably good track
records.
Physiological
Findings
It is of interest that all seven studies that sought
evidence of physiological change (e.g., electrophysiological, biochemical) as a
result of AIT, including the two animal studies, reported positive findings
(Section A, #s 6, 11, 12, 19, 22, 23; Section B, #2). This is an area where further research is indicated, in our
opinion.
‘Placebo’
Music -- Less Inert Than We Think?
Five
studies described in this paper utilized a placebo group and found significant
improvements in both the AIT group and the placebo group (Bettison,
1996, Section C, #1; Panksepp et al., 1996/7, Section A, #23; Waldhoer et al.,
1995, Section A, #22; Yencer, 1998, Section B, #2; Zollweg et al., 1997,
Section B, #3).While such findings are
typically construed to indicate ‘no benefits’ from AIT, we believe there may be
more to the story than that.
Jaak
Panksepp has raised the intriguing possibility (personal communication) that
the presumably inert ‘placebo’ music may have had, contrary to expectation, a
significant beneficial effect.Guy
Berard specified that the music used in his version of AIT must have (1) a good
tempo/beat, (2) a large variation in frequency within short intervals, and (3)
a strong unpredictability component.
Bill Clark, an audio engineer and developer of a popular AIT device,
after analyzing the output of over one thousand compact discs, identified about
70 discs that best meet Berard’s specifications. Most AIT practitioners use the music from Clark’s list
As Panksepp points out, this small subset
of carefully selected, attention-arousing music is not a random sample of
available music and may, in fact, confer benefits that disqualify it from
placebo status.Panksepp suggests such
music arouses and activates attentional circuits in the brain (Panksepp,
1996/7, See Section A, #23).
Future
Research on AIT
Based
on our monitoring of AIT research, we offer the following suggestions for
consideration in future research studies.
___
Diagnostic instruments are
inappropriate for evaluating treatment efficacy. Assessment
instruments designed specifically for evaluating
treatment efficacy should be utilized.
___ An assessment follow-up period of at least
three months is necessary.
___ In a mixed population, separate
statistical analyses should be conducted to assess specific
populations (e.g., AD/HD, autism, CAPD, dyslexia).
___ When describing the AIT procedure, specify
the filter settings, loudness levels, etc. to
permit assessment and replication of the
research.
___ The consistent findings of better than expected outcomes for
the placebo groups in a number of studies, as well as evidence from other
sources, suggests that certain kinds of music may stimulate significant
improvement in attention and learning in some individuals, even without
filtering and/or modulation of the music.
Additional research in this area is clearly needed.
___ All seven of the studies in this review that have measured
electrophysiological or biochemical responses have reported such changes in the
subjects given AIT. Further study of physiological responses to AIT is
indicated.
Our review of the available literature on AIT has
produced 23 studies with positive results and only 3 claiming no benefits from
AIT.While none of the research done
thus far on AIT is of Nobel Prize quality, the positive studies are far more
credible than those with negative results.
As we point out in our comments, the 3 studies that claim no benefits
are deeply flawed, with conclusions that are not supported by the research procedures
nor the research data.
AIT does, in fact, appear to be a worthwhile,
frequently beneficial intervention which confers improvement in a number of
symptoms, in a significant proportion of disorders on the autism spectrum.
*****
The Autism Research
Institute does not offer AIT nor any other form of treatment.
 © copyright 2005, 2006 Autism Research Institute
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