2022
Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research
Music-based interventions for children with autism spectrum disorder and speech/language delays: A systematic review
Sharda, M., Tuerk, C., Chowdhury, R., Jamey, K., et al. (2022)
Systematic review of 18 randomized controlled trials found significant evidence for music-based interventions improving social communication, vocalization, and speech quality in children with ASD. Music interventions outperformed verbal-only approaches on multiple domains. Recommends standardized protocols for clinical integration.
2025
Music Therapy Perspectives
Collaborative music therapy and speech-language pathology for pediatric acquired communication impairments: a phenomenological international perspective
Burns, J., Keaveney, C., Nieto, N., O'Connor, R., & Moss, H. (2025)
International phenomenological study with music therapists and speech-language pathologists working with children with acquired communication impairments (brain injury, stroke, tumor) identified collaborative MT-SLP approaches as the most clinically impactful structure — with both professions recognizing that music therapy uniquely addresses motivation, engagement, and prosodic production in ways that complement the structural goals of SLP. First study to systematically map the interprofessional landscape for MT-SLP collaboration in pediatric acquired communication, providing a foundation for integrated clinical practice models and cross-discipline referral protocols.
2024
Nordic Journal of Music Therapy
Music therapy for young children with acquired communication impairments: an international survey of clinical practices
Burns, J., Keaveney, C., Nieto, N., O'Connor, R., & Moss, H. (2024)
International clinical survey of music therapists working with children who have acquired communication impairments from brain injury, stroke, or tumor found that collaborative music therapy-SLP approaches were consistently identified as most impactful, with goals spanning prosody, breath support, pragmatic communication, and motivation for engagement. Captured global variations in clinical practice and identified core music therapy techniques — including melodic intonation, rhythmic speech cueing, and songwriting — most commonly applied in pediatric neurorehabilitation contexts. Provides a clinical practice map directly relevant to SLPs considering music therapy referral or collaboration.
2015
Frontiers in Psychology
Neurobiological foundations of neurologic music therapy: Rhythmic entrainment and the motor system
Thaut, M.H., McIntosh, G.C., & Hoemberg, V. (2015)
Establishes the neurobiological mechanism behind Rhythmic Auditory Stimulation (RAS) — using rhythmic sound to entrain and rehabilitate motor function. Explains how the auditory-motor coupling in the brain enables rhythm to externally drive and regularize speech output, providing a basis for rhythm-based speech therapy in motor speech disorders.
2012
Aphasiology
Music in the treatment of neurological language and speech disorders: A systematic review
Hurkmans, J., de Bruijn, M., Boonstra, A.M., Jonkers, R., Bastiaanse, R., et al. (2012)
Reviews 42 studies of music-based speech treatments for neurological conditions including aphasia, dysarthria, and apraxia of speech. Found substantial evidence for Melodic Intonation Therapy (MIT) and rhythmic techniques improving verbal output in non-fluent aphasia. Identifies gaps and recommendations for clinical protocol development.
2010
Journal of Music Therapy
Effect of developmental speech and language training through music on speech production in children with autism spectrum disorders
Lim, H.A. (2010)
Randomized controlled study comparing music-based speech training to non-musical speech training in children with ASD. Found significantly greater improvements in verbal output, functional speech acts, and communicative intent in the music group. Identified music's multimodal sensory engagement as the key therapeutic mechanism.
2010
Music Perception
The therapeutic effects of singing in neurological disorders
Wan, C.Y., Rüber, T., Hohmann, A., & Schlaug, G. (2010)
Reviews the evidence for singing as a speech rehabilitation tool across stroke aphasia, autism, stuttering, Parkinson's, and developmental language disorders. Identifies why the speech-to-song transformation is clinically powerful: melodic contour, rhythm, and articulatory repetition converge to activate intact neural pathways unavailable to spoken speech alone.
2010
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
Can singing help recover speech after a stroke? Toward a better understanding of melodic intonation therapy
Schlaug, G., Marchina, S., & Norton, A. (2010)
Reviews the neural basis of Melodic Intonation Therapy (MIT) for non-fluent aphasia, demonstrating that singing activates right hemisphere language-capable regions that bypass damaged left hemisphere speech areas. Longitudinal neuroimaging showed MIT patients grew right hemisphere arcuate fasciculus fibers — providing an anatomical explanation for why melodic speech enables verbal output when standard speech fails.
2012
Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience
Musical training during early childhood enhances the neural encoding of speech
Strait, D.L., O'Connell, S., Parbery-Clark, A., & Kraus, N. (2012)
Compared neural encoding of speech in children with and without formal music training, finding that musically trained children showed significantly more robust brainstem responses to speech in noise. Training duration was positively correlated with encoding precision. Establishes a direct link between musical experience and the neural machinery for speech perception — the foundation of music's value in language intervention.
2011
Brain
Rhythm in disguise: Why singing may not hold the key to recovery from aphasia
Stahl, B., Henseler, I., Turner, R., Geyer, S., & Kotz, S.A. (2011)
Challenges some assumptions about MIT by demonstrating that the rhythmic structure of melodic speech — not melody per se — is the key rehabilitative mechanism. fMRI data showed that rhythmic speech recruited basal ganglia and right hemisphere pathways in aphasia patients. Refines clinical understanding of why music-based speech therapy works, pointing to rhythm as the core active ingredient.
2008
Journal of Music Therapy
The effect of improvisational music therapy on joint attention behaviors in autistic children
Kim, J., Wigram, T., & Gold, C. (2008)
Randomized crossover study comparing improvisational music therapy to play sessions in children with autism found that music therapy produced significantly more joint attention, emotional synchrony, and turn-taking behaviors. Effects were largest in minimally verbal children. Demonstrates that the shared musical "conversation" creates a uniquely powerful scaffold for social-communicative development in ASD.
2014
Journal of Music Therapy
Effects of a music therapy group intervention on enhancing social skills in children with autism
LaGasse, A.B. (2014)
Group music therapy intervention with children with ASD showed significant gains in eye contact, response to name, communicative gesturing, and social reciprocity compared to waitlist controls. Social skills generalized to non-music settings post-treatment. Highlights the ecological validity of group music therapy as a practical clinical model for building social-communicative competence in ASD populations.
2003
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
Dyslexia and music: Measuring musical timing deficits in children
Overy, K. (2003)
Proposes and tests the hypothesis that dyslexia involves underlying timing deficits affecting both musical and phonological processing. Children with dyslexia performed significantly worse on musical rhythm and pitch discrimination tasks alongside phonological tests. Suggests music training targeting temporal processing could address the shared neural deficit underlying both poor reading and poor musical timing in dyslexic children.
2013
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
Music and language integration in the brain: From anatomy to neural oscillations
Merrett, D.L., Peretz, I., & Wilson, S.J. (2013)
Reviews the shared and distinct neural substrates of music and language, showing that both systems rely on overlapping networks for syntax, prosody, and emotional processing. Proposes that the oscillatory dynamics underlying musical rhythm are repurposed for the temporal structure of language — explaining why rhythm training can target the core auditory processing deficits seen in language disorders and dyslexia.
1996
Journal of Neurologic Rehabilitation
Rhythmic auditory stimulation in gait training for Parkinson's disease patients
Thaut, M.H., McIntosh, G.C., Rice, R.R., Miller, R.A., Rathbun, J., & Brault, J.M. (1996)
Landmark RCT demonstrating that Rhythmic Auditory Stimulation improved gait velocity, stride length, and step cadence in Parkinson's disease patients significantly more than standard physical therapy. The metronome-driven walking therapy produced effects within 3 weeks and maintained improvements at follow-up — one of the first demonstrations that rhythmic sound can directly rehabilitate motor function, laying groundwork for rhythm-based speech therapy.
1995
Journal of Music Therapy
The effects of signed and spoken words taught with music on sign and speech imitation by children with autism spectrum disorders
Buday, E.M. (1995)
Demonstrated that pairing signs and words with rhythmic musical cues significantly increased imitation of both signs and words in children with autism compared to speech-only instruction. The temporal structure of music appears to support the motor sequencing and attention required for imitation — one of the earliest studies establishing music as a scaffold for early vocabulary acquisition in ASD.
1976
Journal of Speech and Hearing Disorders
Melodic Intonation Therapy
Sparks, R.W., & Holland, A.L. (1976)
Foundational clinical paper describing the Melodic Intonation Therapy (MIT) protocol for severe non-fluent aphasia — a structured approach using melodic speech and tapping to facilitate verbal output via right hemisphere pathways. Established the template for music-supported speech rehabilitation that has been validated in hundreds of subsequent studies and remains a gold-standard technique in clinical speech-language pathology.
2005
Brain and Language
Neuroimaging study of music-based intervention in children with speech and language disorders
Norton, A., Winner, E., Cronin, K., Overy, K., Lee, D.J., & Schlaug, G. (2005)
Pilot neuroimaging study found that children with speech and language disorders who received music-based training showed improvements in speech motor sequencing, phonological awareness, and verbal memory alongside changes in auditory-motor brain connectivity. Provides early neurobiological evidence supporting music therapy's clinical efficacy for speech and language disorders and argues for larger controlled trials.
2002
Neuroreport
Music-supported training is better than standard training for recovering fine motor skills after stroke
Schneider, S., Schönle, P.W., Altenmüller, E., & Münte, T.F. (2002)
Randomized trial in post-stroke patients found that music-supported training using piano and drum produced significantly greater recovery of fine motor hand movements than standard physiotherapy. EEG showed enhanced sensorimotor plasticity in the music group. Establishes that auditory-motor coupling via musical instruments provides a unique rehabilitation advantage over movement training alone.