Abstract

BackgroundEarly prelingual auditory development (EPLAD) is a fundamental and important process in the speech and language development of infants and toddlers. The Infant–Toddler Meaningful Auditory Integration Scale (ITMAIS) is a widely used measurement tool for EPLAD, however it has not yet undergone a comprehensive psychometric analysis. The aim of this research was to modify and verify the psychometric properties of ITMAIS using a combination of Item Response Theory (IRT) and Classical Test Theory (CTT).MethodsStage 1—1730 children were retrospectively recruited to enable the application of an IRT model, specifically the graded response model, to modify the ITMAIS. Stage 2—another 450 infants and toddlers with normal hearing or permanent hearing loss before auditory intervention were recruited to verify the psychometric properties of the modified ITMAIS (ITMAIS-m) using the CTT method.ResultsUsing the metric of the graded response model, by removing item 2 from the ITMAIS, ITMAIS-m demonstrated discrimination parameters ranging from 3.947 to 5.431, difficulty parameters from − 1.146 to 1.150, item information distributed between 4.798 and 9.259 and a test information score of 48.061. None of the items showed differential item functioning. ITMAIS-m was further verified in Stage 2, showing Cronbach’s α of 0.919 and item-total correlations ranging from 0.693 to 0.851. There was good convergent validity of ITMAIS-m with other auditory outcome measure (r = 0.932) and pure tone average thresholds (r ranging from − 0.670 to − 0.909), as well as a high ability to discriminate between different hearing grades (Cohen d ranging from 0.41 to 5.83).ConclusionsThe ITMAIS-m is a reliable and valid tool for evaluating EPLAD in infants and toddlers, which can be efficiently and precisely applied in clinical practice. The combined use of IRT and CTT provides a powerful means to modify psychometrically robust scales aimed at childhood auditory outcome measurements.

Highlights

  • According to a recent WHO report (2019), 34 million children younger than 14 years of age have a disabling hearing loss [1]

  • The assessment ages in Stage 1 were significantly older, with 1086 individuals assessed with Infant–Toddler Meaningful Auditory Integration Scale (ITMAIS) in the follow-up period between 1 month and 4 years after auditory interventions

  • Children in this stage mostly had the level of profound hearing loss (66.2%) or sensorineural hearing loss (76.3%), while hearing grades in Stage 2 were uniformly distributed

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Summary

Introduction

According to a recent WHO report (2019), 34 million children younger than 14 years of age have a disabling hearing loss [1]. In an attempt to maximize speech and language competence in hearing-impaired children, the Joint Committee on Infant Hearing (JCIH) issued guidelines for Early Hearing Detection and Intervention (EHDI) programs for infants in 2000, and later were updated in 2007 and 2019 This emphasizes the importance of early auditory evaluation and intervention [5,6,7]. The Infant– Toddler Meaningful Integration Scale (ITMAIS) is one that is able to evaluate infants and toddlers’ early prelingual auditory development (EPLAD) in aspects of detection, discrimination and identification of sounds. This is achieved from parental observation reports on children’s auditory behaviors in daily routines [9,10,11,12]. The aim of this research was to modify and verify the psychometric properties of ITMAIS using a combination of Item Response Theory (IRT) and Classical Test Theory (CTT)

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