A MIXED METHODS LONGITUDINAL STUDY: EXAMINING HOW THE HOME ENVIRONMENT SHAPES INFANT FEEDING AND LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT

NIH-Funded Graduate Research at Northeastern University's Speech and Neurodevelopment Lab

Northeastern's Speech & Neurodevelopment Lab (SNL) is an NIH-funded research lab studying how sucking, feeding, and early language develop together in infancy. As Graduate Researcher and Co-author, I designed and executed a mixed methods longitudinal study - conducting in-home visits with 132 infants, surveying 307 early intervention SLPs, and analyzing data in SPSS - resulting in two peer-reviewed publications and a clinical roadmap for how the home environment shapes child development in the first year of life.

Overview

MY ROLE:

Graduate Researcher & Co-author

LAB:

Speech & Neurodevelopment Lab, Northeastern University

FUNDING:

NIH R21DC016030

PARTICIPANTS:

74 infants (3 months) · 58 infants (12 months) · 307 SLPs surveyed

DURATION:

2018 - 2020

PRESENTED:

RISE Symposium 2019 · ASHA National Conference 2019

PUBLISHED:

Midwifery 2023 · Pediatric Medicine 2022

DATA COLLECTION TOOLS:

Qualtrics · LENA · Non-nutritive suck device · Assessments (Neo-EAT, Pedi-EAT, OFS)

STATISTICAL ANALYSIS:

SPSS · Shapiro-Wilk · Spearman Correlation

COMMUNICATING INSIGHTS:

Academic Publishing· Poster Design · Conference Presentation

SECTION 1

Background

my why

As a graduate student, I was drawn to infant feeding because I wanted to work in hospitals, supporting families navigating some of the scariest moments of their lives. A premature baby in the NICU. A mom struggling to feed her newborn. A family without answers.

I wanted to understand: Why do infants struggle with feeding? How can we help them? And how can we help the clinicians supporting these families too?

That curiosity led me to the Speech & Neurodevelopment Lab (SNL) at Northeastern - led by Dr. Emily Zimmerman, one of the only researchers in the country studying how sucking, feeding, and early language develop together. I joined as a graduate researcher in 2018, and it's where this study came to life.

Members of the Speech & Neurodevelopment Lab, 2018–2020 - pictured with the Soothie pacifiers used in our studies.

a gap in literature

Research consistently shows that both feeding and language development in infancy are shaped by the home environment:

The quality and amount of language a baby hears at home shapes how their vocabulary grows

Back-and-forth conversations between adults and babies directly shape language development

How caregivers respond during feeding affects how babies learn to self-regulate

A stimulating home environment supports how babies think and communicate

However, to our knowledge, no one has ever studied feeding, language development, and the home environment all together.

SECTION 2

Research questions

What we set out to answer

With the gap identified, we needed the right questions. These three aims shaped every research and methodological decision that followed:

AIM 1:

How do IT-HOME subscales relate to language exposure (measured by LENA device) at 3 and 12 months?

AIM 2:

How do IT-HOME subscales relate to infant feeding outcomes at 3 and 12 months?

AIM 3:

What do practicing SLPs believe about the home environment's role in early intervention - and are they actually acting on those beliefs?

why this matters

Understanding these connections helps us support child development more effectively - and gives parents meaningful guidance on the decisions that shape their baby's first year.

SECTION 3

methods

This study was conducted in two phases, each designed to answer a different set of research questions:

PHASE I

Longitudinal Observational Study

Home visits with full-term infants at 3 and 12 months of age

PHASE II

Speech-Language Pathologist (SLP) Survey

A national Qualtrics survey of 307 early intervention SLPs

PHASE I & II

How the Findings Interact

Connecting home environment data with SLP clinical practice

PHASE II

SLP Survey

A national Qualtrics survey of 307 early intervention SLPs

Phase I: Longitudinal observational study

Data for Phase I comes from a larger ongoing study examining the relationship between sucking, oral feeding, and vocal development in full-term infants. Home visits were conducted at 3 months and again at 12 months.

Families received an Amazon gift card for participating - $50 at the 3-month visit and $100 at 12 months.

What happened during a visit

We entered the family's home, set up our equipment, and completed the following:

  1. Non-Nutritive Suck (NNS) Assessment

Infant sucked on a custom research pacifier connected to a pressure transducer system and ADInstruments PowerLab for 5 minutes. LabChart Pro software analyzed the suck dynamics.

Measured:

NNS Amplitude · NNS Cycles/min · NNS Cycles/burst · NNS Frequency (Hz) · NNS Bursts/min

  1. Oral Feeding Skills (OFS)

Researcher observed and recorded a full bottle feed to assess the infant's oral feeding skills.

Measured:

Initial bottle intake (ml) · Transfer rate (ml/min) · Transfer volume (% volume) · Feeding proficiency

  1. Feeding Questionnaire - parent report

Caregiver completed a standardized feeding questionnaire while the researcher was present.

Measured:

Neo-EAT ( administered 3 months) · Pedi-EAT (administered at 12 months)

  1. LENA — language environment recording

Infant was fitted with a vest containing a Digital Language Processor worn for 12 hours to record the naturalistic language environment. Parents kept an hourly activity log.

Measured:

Child Vocalization Count (CVC) · Adult Word Count (AWC) · Conversational Turn Count (CTC) · Percent Time Vocalized

  1. IT-HOME Inventory

Researcher completed the 45-item Infant-Toddler HOME Inventory through observation and interview questions.

Subscales:

Responsivity · Acceptance · Organization · Learning Materials · Involvement · Variety of Daily Stimulation

Phase II: SLP Survey

The purpose of Phase II was to understand what clinicians actually knew - and did - when it came to the home environment.

survey design

An electronic survey was designed and launched via Qualtrics, distributed to early intervention SLPs through online Facebook forums. The survey consisted of 34 questions and took approximately 5 minutes to complete. Launched August 2019, closed January 2020. Participants were entered in a raffle to win a $50 Amazon gift card.

SECTION 4

Participants

Phase I: Longitudinal observational study

3 MONTHS

74

infants

51.4% male · Average age 2.97 months
90.5% no family history of speech-language issues
Majority Caucasian caregivers, primarily English-speaking
~66% of caregivers held graduate degrees

12 MONTHS

58

infants

30 male · Average age 11.87 months
Similar demographic profile to 3-month cohort
94.5% no family history of speech-language issues
~72% of caregivers held graduate degrees

Inclusion Criteria: Infants were included in this study if they were enrolled in the larger, ongoing study in the lab · Full-term birth (≥37 weeks gestation)

Phase II: SLP Survey

SLPs ranged from under 5 years to over 20 years of experience

0

0

Total responses recieved

0

0

Final sample after exclusions

0%

0%

Worked in home environment

Inclusion Criteria: To be included, participants were required to hold ASHA certification, provide consent to participate, and complete 100% of the survey

SECTION 5

Results

Phase I: Longitudinal observational study

Key findings

Spearman correlations revealed significant associations between specific IT-HOME subscales and infant feeding and language outcomes at both time points.

AT 3 MONTHS

IT-HOME Involvement -

IT-HOME Involvement

Positively associated with NNS Burst and OFS Initial. More involved caregivers had infants with stronger sucking patterns and better bottle intake.

rs=.354, p=.003 · rs=.329, p=.015

IT-HOME Variety -

IT-HOME Variety

Positively associated with OFS Transfer Volume and Transfer Rate. More varied home stimulation linked to better feeding efficiency.

rs=.543, p<.001 · rs=.289, p=.040

IT-HOME Acceptance -

IT-HOME Acceptance

Negatively associated with Neo-EAT Bottle Stability and Total. More accepting caregivers reported fewer feeding difficulties.

rs=-.290, p=.039 · rs=-.353, p=.019

IT-HOME Organization -

IT-HOME Organization

Positively associated with Child Vocalization, Conversational Turn Count, and Percent Time Vocalized. More regulated homes had more vocal infants.

rs=.254, p=.043 · rs=.265, p=.034 · rs=.293, p=.019

AT 12 MONTHS

IT-HOME Organization -

Negatively associated with PediEAT Physiology, Mealtime Behavior, Selective Eating, and Total. More regulated homes had fewer feeding difficulties at 12 months.

rs=-.281, p=.042 · rs=-.347, p=.012 · rs=-.313, p=.027 · rs=-.387, p=.006

IT-HOME Acceptance -

Positively associated with NNS Frequency. Less restrictive caregiving linked to faster sucking patterns.

rs=.543, p<.001 · rs=.289, p=.040

IT-HOME Acceptance -

Negatively associated with Neo-EAT Bottle Stability and Total. More accepting caregivers reported fewer feeding difficulties.

rs=.337, p=.037

IT-HOME Learning Materials -

Positively associated with NNS Cycles/Burst and Child Vocalizations. More stimulating play environments linked to stronger sucking and more vocalizations.

rs=.314, p=.048 · rs=.291, p=.048

Phase II: SLP Survey

What SLPs told us

162 early intervention SLPs completed the survey. What they said revealed a striking gap between knowledge and action.

0%

0%

Believe home environment plays a role in speech & language development

0%

0%

Believe it plays a role in feeding development

THE GAP — KNOWLEDGE VS. ACTION

51.23%

Of SLPs reported to always educate families on the home environment

12 MONTHS

25.31%

Of SLPs reported to always encourage families to actually change their home environment

12 MONTHS

25.31%

Of SLPs reported to always encourage families to actually change their home environment

SLPs know it matters - but most aren't acting on it.

SECTION 5

key Insights

Phase I & II: How the findings interact

What we learned

The home environment shapes both feeding and language development

Specific aspects of the home - how organized it is, how involved caregivers are, what materials are present - consistently predicted feeding and vocalization outcomes at both 3 and 12 months. And the aspects that mattered shifted as infants developed.

SLPs know it matters - but most aren't acting on it

Nearly all SLPs believe the home environment is important for speech-language development. But fewer than 1 in 4 are actively encouraging families to change it. There's no standardized approach - and that gap needs to be addressed.

Context matters - feeding time is underutilized

Research shows parents use more diverse language during feeding than during play - yet most early intervention focuses on play contexts. Mealtime is a missed opportunity for language and bonding that clinicians should be leveraging.

In summary: Different aspects of the home environment influence feeding and vocalizations early in infancy - and as the infant matures, different aspects become important. At 3 months, involvement and variety drive feeding outcomes. At 12 months, organization and learning materials take over.


SLPs know the home environment matters. But fewer than 1 in 4 are actively encouraging families to change it.

This research created a roadmap for when and how clinicians should intervene.

from research to practice - clinical personas

These findings don't just live in a journal - they translate directly into how clinicians should support families. Here's what that looks like in practice.

Baby Sam, 3 months

Presenting with feeding difficulties

WHAT THE RESEARCH TELLS US

At 3 months, IT-HOME Involvement and Acceptance predicted feeding outcomes. Caregiver responsiveness and positive reinforcement during feeding directly shaped how infants fed.

WHAT AN SLP SHOULD DO

Encourage caregivers to respond to hunger cues, educate on developmental milestones, and advocate for positive feeding experiences. A family-centered, multidisciplinary approach is critical at this stage.

Baby Maya, 12 months

Presenting with reduced vocalizations

WHAT THE RESEARCH TELLS US

At 12 months, IT-HOME Learning Materials predicted child vocalizations. Infants with more stimulating toys and play materials vocalized more - the home environment was directly shaping their language development.

WHAT AN SLP SHOULD DO

Advocate for age-appropriate toys and books at home. Teach caregivers how to use these materials to encourage interaction - and support with models, prompts, and feedback so changes actually stick.

WHAT THIS MEANS FOR FUTURE RESEARCH

More research is needed across different home environments and across activities within the same environment. As this study showed, context matters - the same home can provide very different developmental opportunities depending on whether an infant is feeding, playing, or just awake and listening. Future studies should examine these distinctions more closely.

SECTION 7

Reflections

What this research taught me: This was my first experience conducting rigorous mixed methods research from study design through statistical analysis through publication. Running home visits, fitting infants with LENA vests, administering standardized assessments, and analyzing SPSS data - gave me a research foundation I carry into every project I do today.

What I'd do differently: The survey sample (Phase II) was distributed through online SLP forums which may have introduced self-selection bias - SLPs who actively engage in online professional communities may not represent all early intervention practitioners. A more diverse recruitment strategy would strengthen generalizability.

What this means for UX: The same question that drove this research drives my UX work - there's a gap between what people know and what they actually do. Understanding that gap, and designing interventions to close it, is at the core of both clinical research and product research.

SECTION 8

Publications

Peer reviewed publications

This work (my graduate thesis) contributed to two peer-reviewed, NIH-funded publications - both publicly available and searchable:

MIDWIFERY · VOLUME 116 · JANUARY 2023 · NIH FUNDED

The home environment and its relation to bottle feeding outcomes in the first year of life

Martens A, Carpenito T, Hines M, Iizuka A, Aspinwall B, Zimmerman E

PEDIATRIC MEDICINE · 2022 · NIH FUNDED

The home environment and its relation to vocalizations in the first year of life

Hines M, Carpenito T, Martens A, Iizuka A, Aspinwall B, Zimmerman E

conference presentations

ASHA NATIONAL CONFERENCE · 2019

American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

Presented findings on the relationship between the home environment, infant feeding, and vocalizations to a national audience of speech-language pathologists and researchers.

RISE SYMPOSIUM · 2019

Northeastern University Research Symposium

Presented a poster on longitudinal findings connecting IT-HOME subscales to infant feeding and vocalization outcomes at 3 and 12 months.

A MIXED METHODS LONGITUDINAL STUDY: EXAMINING HOW THE HOME ENVIRONMENT SHAPES INFANT FEEDING AND LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT

NIH-Funded Graduate Research at Northeastern University's Speech and Neurodevelopment Lab

Northeastern's Speech & Neurodevelopment Lab (SNL) is an NIH-funded research lab studying how sucking, feeding, and early language develop together in infancy. As Graduate Researcher and Co-author, I designed and executed a mixed methods longitudinal study - conducting in-home visits with 132 infants, surveying 307 early intervention SLPs, and analyzing data in SPSS - resulting in two peer-reviewed publications and a clinical roadmap for how the home environment shapes child development in the first year of life.

Overview

MY ROLE:

Graduate Researcher & Co-author

LAB:

Speech & Neurodevelopment Lab, Northeastern University

FUNDING:

NIH R21DC016030

PARTICIPANTS:

74 infants (3 months) · 58 infants (12 months) · 307 SLPs surveyed

DURATION:

2018 - 2020

PRESENTED:

RISE Symposium 2019 · ASHA National Conference 2019

PUBLISHED:

Midwifery 2023 · Pediatric Medicine 2022

DATA COLLECTION TOOLS:

Qualtrics · LENA · Non-nutritive suck device · Assessments (Neo-EAT, Pedi-EAT, OFS)

STATISTICAL ANALYSIS:

SPSS · Shapiro-Wilk · Spearman Correlation

COMMUNICATING INSIGHTS:

Academic Publishing· Poster Design · Conference Presentation

SECTION 1

Background

my why

As a graduate student, I was drawn to infant feeding because I wanted to work in hospitals, supporting families navigating some of the scariest moments of their lives. A premature baby in the NICU. A mom struggling to feed her newborn. A family without answers.

I wanted to understand: Why do infants struggle with feeding? How can we help them? And how can we help the clinicians supporting these families too?

That curiosity led me to the Speech & Neurodevelopment Lab (SNL) at Northeastern - led by Dr. Emily Zimmerman, one of the only researchers in the country studying how sucking, feeding, and early language develop together. I joined as a graduate researcher in 2018, and it's where this study came to life.

Members of the Speech & Neurodevelopment Lab, 2018–2020 - pictured with the Soothie pacifiers used in our studies.

a gap in literature

Research consistently shows that both feeding and language development in infancy are shaped by the home environment:

The quality and amount of language a baby hears at home shapes how their vocabulary grows

Back-and-forth conversations between adults and babies directly shape language development

How caregivers respond during feeding affects how babies learn to self-regulate

A stimulating home environment supports how babies think and communicate

However, to our knowledge, no one has ever studied feeding, language development, and the home environment all together.

SECTION 2

Research questions

What we set out to answer

With the gap identified, we needed the right questions. These three aims shaped every research and methodological decision that followed:

AIM 1:

How do IT-HOME subscales relate to language exposure (measured by LENA device) at 3 and 12 months?

AIM 2:

How do IT-HOME subscales relate to infant feeding outcomes at 3 and 12 months?

AIM 3:

What do practicing SLPs believe about the home environment's role in early intervention - and are they actually acting on those beliefs?

why this matters

Understanding these connections helps us support child development more effectively - and gives parents meaningful guidance on the decisions that shape their baby's first year.

SECTION 3

methods

This study was conducted in two phases, each designed to answer a different set of research questions:

PHASE I

Longitudinal Observational Study

Home visits with full-term infants at 3 and 12 months of age

PHASE II

Speech-Language Pathologist (SLP) Survey

A national Qualtrics survey of 307 early intervention SLPs

PHASE I & II

How the Findings Interact

Connecting home environment data with SLP clinical practice

PHASE II

SLP Survey

A national Qualtrics survey of 307 early intervention SLPs

Phase I: Longitudinal observational study

Data for Phase I comes from a larger ongoing study examining the relationship between sucking, oral feeding, and vocal development in full-term infants. Home visits were conducted at 3 months and again at 12 months.

Families received an Amazon gift card for participating - $50 at the 3-month visit and $100 at 12 months.

What happened during a visit

We entered the family's home, set up our equipment, and completed the following:

  1. Non-Nutritive Suck (NNS) Assessment

Infant sucked on a custom research pacifier connected to a pressure transducer system and ADInstruments PowerLab for 5 minutes. LabChart Pro software analyzed the suck dynamics.

Measured:

NNS Amplitude · NNS Cycles/min · NNS Cycles/burst · NNS Frequency (Hz) · NNS Bursts/min

  1. Oral Feeding Skills (OFS)

Researcher observed and recorded a full bottle feed to assess the infant's oral feeding skills.

Measured:

Initial bottle intake (ml) · Transfer rate (ml/min) · Transfer volume (% volume) · Feeding proficiency

  1. Feeding Questionnaire - parent report

Caregiver completed a standardized feeding questionnaire while the researcher was present.

Measured:

Neo-EAT ( administered 3 months) · Pedi-EAT (administered at 12 months)

  1. LENA — language environment recording

Infant was fitted with a vest containing a Digital Language Processor worn for 12 hours to record the naturalistic language environment. Parents kept an hourly activity log.

Measured:

Child Vocalization Count (CVC) · Adult Word Count (AWC) · Conversational Turn Count (CTC) · Percent Time Vocalized

  1. IT-HOME Inventory

Researcher completed the 45-item Infant-Toddler HOME Inventory through observation and interview questions.

Subscales:

Responsivity · Acceptance · Organization · Learning Materials · Involvement · Variety of Daily Stimulation

Phase II: SLP Survey

The purpose of Phase II was to understand what clinicians actually knew - and did - when it came to the home environment.

survey design

An electronic survey was designed and launched via Qualtrics, distributed to early intervention SLPs through online Facebook forums. The survey consisted of 34 questions and took approximately 5 minutes to complete. Launched August 2019, closed January 2020. Participants were entered in a raffle to win a $50 Amazon gift card.

SECTION 4

Participants

Phase I: Longitudinal observational study

3 MONTHS

74

infants

51.4% male · Average age 2.97 months
90.5% no family history of speech-language issues
Majority Caucasian caregivers, primarily English-speaking
~66% of caregivers held graduate degrees

12 MONTHS

58

infants

30 male · Average age 11.87 months
Similar demographic profile to 3-month cohort
94.5% no family history of speech-language issues
~72% of caregivers held graduate degrees

Inclusion Criteria: Infants were included in this study if they were enrolled in the larger, ongoing study in the lab · Full-term birth (≥37 weeks gestation)

Phase II: SLP Survey

SLPs ranged from under 5 years to over 20 years of experience

0

0

Total responses recieved

0

0

Final sample after exclusions

0%

0%

Worked in home environment

Inclusion Criteria: To be included, participants were required to hold ASHA certification, provide consent to participate, and complete 100% of the survey

SECTION 5

Results

Phase I: Longitudinal observational study

Key findings

Spearman correlations revealed significant associations between specific IT-HOME subscales and infant feeding and language outcomes at both time points.

AT 3 MONTHS

IT-HOME Involvement -

IT-HOME Involvement

Positively associated with NNS Burst and OFS Initial. More involved caregivers had infants with stronger sucking patterns and better bottle intake.

rs=.354, p=.003 · rs=.329, p=.015

IT-HOME Variety -

IT-HOME Variety

Positively associated with OFS Transfer Volume and Transfer Rate. More varied home stimulation linked to better feeding efficiency.

rs=.543, p<.001 · rs=.289, p=.040

IT-HOME Acceptance -

IT-HOME Acceptance

Negatively associated with Neo-EAT Bottle Stability and Total. More accepting caregivers reported fewer feeding difficulties.

rs=-.290, p=.039 · rs=-.353, p=.019

IT-HOME Organization -

IT-HOME Organization

Positively associated with Child Vocalization, Conversational Turn Count, and Percent Time Vocalized. More regulated homes had more vocal infants.

rs=.254, p=.043 · rs=.265, p=.034 · rs=.293, p=.019

AT 12 MONTHS

IT-HOME Organization -

Negatively associated with PediEAT Physiology, Mealtime Behavior, Selective Eating, and Total. More regulated homes had fewer feeding difficulties at 12 months.

rs=-.281, p=.042 · rs=-.347, p=.012 · rs=-.313, p=.027 · rs=-.387, p=.006

IT-HOME Acceptance -

Positively associated with NNS Frequency. Less restrictive caregiving linked to faster sucking patterns.

rs=.543, p<.001 · rs=.289, p=.040

IT-HOME Acceptance -

Negatively associated with Neo-EAT Bottle Stability and Total. More accepting caregivers reported fewer feeding difficulties.

rs=.337, p=.037

IT-HOME Learning Materials -

Positively associated with NNS Cycles/Burst and Child Vocalizations. More stimulating play environments linked to stronger sucking and more vocalizations.

rs=.314, p=.048 · rs=.291, p=.048

Phase II: SLP Survey

What SLPs told us

162 early intervention SLPs completed the survey. What they said revealed a striking gap between knowledge and action.

0%

0%

Believe home environment plays a role in speech & language development

0%

0%

Believe it plays a role in feeding development

THE GAP — KNOWLEDGE VS. ACTION

51.23%

Of SLPs reported to always educate families on the home environment

12 MONTHS

25.31%

Of SLPs reported to always encourage families to actually change their home environment

12 MONTHS

25.31%

Of SLPs reported to always encourage families to actually change their home environment

SLPs know it matters - but most aren't acting on it.

SECTION 5

key Insights

Phase I & II: How the findings interact

What we learned

The home environment shapes both feeding and language development

Specific aspects of the home - how organized it is, how involved caregivers are, what materials are present - consistently predicted feeding and vocalization outcomes at both 3 and 12 months. And the aspects that mattered shifted as infants developed.

SLPs know it matters - but most aren't acting on it

Nearly all SLPs believe the home environment is important for speech-language development. But fewer than 1 in 4 are actively encouraging families to change it. There's no standardized approach - and that gap needs to be addressed.

Context matters - feeding time is underutilized

Research shows parents use more diverse language during feeding than during play - yet most early intervention focuses on play contexts. Mealtime is a missed opportunity for language and bonding that clinicians should be leveraging.

In summary: Different aspects of the home environment influence feeding and vocalizations early in infancy - and as the infant matures, different aspects become important. At 3 months, involvement and variety drive feeding outcomes. At 12 months, organization and learning materials take over.


SLPs know the home environment matters. But fewer than 1 in 4 are actively encouraging families to change it.

This research created a roadmap for when and how clinicians should intervene.

from research to practice - clinical personas

These findings don't just live in a journal - they translate directly into how clinicians should support families. Here's what that looks like in practice.

Baby Sam, 3 months

Presenting with feeding difficulties

WHAT THE RESEARCH TELLS US

At 3 months, IT-HOME Involvement and Acceptance predicted feeding outcomes. Caregiver responsiveness and positive reinforcement during feeding directly shaped how infants fed.

WHAT AN SLP SHOULD DO

Encourage caregivers to respond to hunger cues, educate on developmental milestones, and advocate for positive feeding experiences. A family-centered, multidisciplinary approach is critical at this stage.

Baby Maya, 12 months

Presenting with reduced vocalizations

WHAT THE RESEARCH TELLS US

At 12 months, IT-HOME Learning Materials predicted child vocalizations. Infants with more stimulating toys and play materials vocalized more - the home environment was directly shaping their language development.

WHAT AN SLP SHOULD DO

Advocate for age-appropriate toys and books at home. Teach caregivers how to use these materials to encourage interaction - and support with models, prompts, and feedback so changes actually stick.

WHAT THIS MEANS FOR FUTURE RESEARCH

More research is needed across different home environments and across activities within the same environment. As this study showed, context matters - the same home can provide very different developmental opportunities depending on whether an infant is feeding, playing, or just awake and listening. Future studies should examine these distinctions more closely.

SECTION 7

Reflections

What this research taught me: This was my first experience conducting rigorous mixed methods research from study design through statistical analysis through publication. Running home visits, fitting infants with LENA vests, administering standardized assessments, and analyzing SPSS data - gave me a research foundation I carry into every project I do today.

What I'd do differently: The survey sample (Phase II) was distributed through online SLP forums which may have introduced self-selection bias - SLPs who actively engage in online professional communities may not represent all early intervention practitioners. A more diverse recruitment strategy would strengthen generalizability.

What this means for UX: The same question that drove this research drives my UX work - there's a gap between what people know and what they actually do. Understanding that gap, and designing interventions to close it, is at the core of both clinical research and product research.

SECTION 8

Publications

Peer reviewed publications

This work (my graduate thesis) contributed to two peer-reviewed, NIH-funded publications - both publicly available and searchable:

MIDWIFERY · VOLUME 116 · JANUARY 2023 · NIH FUNDED

The home environment and its relation to bottle feeding outcomes in the first year of life

Martens A, Carpenito T, Hines M, Iizuka A, Aspinwall B, Zimmerman E

PEDIATRIC MEDICINE · 2022 · NIH FUNDED

The home environment and its relation to vocalizations in the first year of life

Hines M, Carpenito T, Martens A, Iizuka A, Aspinwall B, Zimmerman E

conference presentations

ASHA NATIONAL CONFERENCE · 2019

American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

Presented findings on the relationship between the home environment, infant feeding, and vocalizations to a national audience of speech-language pathologists and researchers.

RISE SYMPOSIUM · 2019

Northeastern University Research Symposium

Presented a poster on longitudinal findings connecting IT-HOME subscales to infant feeding and vocalization outcomes at 3 and 12 months.

A MIXED METHODS LONGITUDINAL STUDY: EXAMINING HOW THE HOME ENVIRONMENT SHAPES INFANT FEEDING AND LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT

NIH-Funded Graduate Research at Northeastern University's Speech and Neurodevelopment Lab

Northeastern's Speech & Neurodevelopment Lab (SNL) is an NIH-funded research lab studying how sucking, feeding, and early language develop together in infancy. As Graduate Researcher and Co-author, I designed and executed a mixed methods longitudinal study - conducting in-home visits with 132 infants, surveying 307 early intervention SLPs, and analyzing data in SPSS - resulting in two peer-reviewed publications and a clinical roadmap for how the home environment shapes child development in the first year of life.

Overview

MY ROLE:

Graduate Researcher & Co-author

LAB:

Speech & Neurodevelopment Lab, Northeastern University

FUNDING:

NIH R21DC016030

PARTICIPANTS:

74 infants (3 months) · 58 infants (12 months) · 307 SLPs surveyed

DURATION:

2018 - 2020

PRESENTED:

RISE Symposium 2019 · ASHA National Conference 2019

PUBLISHED:

Midwifery 2023 · Pediatric Medicine 2022

DATA COLLECTION TOOLS:

Qualtrics · LENA · Non-nutritive suck device · Assessments (Neo-EAT, Pedi-EAT, OFS)

STATISTICAL ANALYSIS:

SPSS · Shapiro-Wilk · Spearman Correlation

COMMUNICATING INSIGHTS:

Academic Publishing· Poster Design · Conference Presentation

SECTION 1

Background

my why

As a graduate student, I was drawn to infant feeding because I wanted to work in hospitals, supporting families navigating some of the scariest moments of their lives. A premature baby in the NICU. A mom struggling to feed her newborn. A family without answers.

I wanted to understand: Why do infants struggle with feeding? How can we help them? And how can we help the clinicians supporting these families too?

That curiosity led me to the Speech & Neurodevelopment Lab (SNL) at Northeastern - led by Dr. Emily Zimmerman, one of the only researchers in the country studying how sucking, feeding, and early language develop together. I joined as a graduate researcher in 2018, and it's where this study came to life.

Members of the Speech & Neurodevelopment Lab, 2018–2020 - pictured with the Soothie pacifiers used in our studies.

a gap in literature

Research consistently shows that both feeding and language development in infancy are shaped by the home environment:

The quality and amount of language a baby hears at home shapes how their vocabulary grows

Back-and-forth conversations between adults and babies directly shape language development

How caregivers respond during feeding affects how babies learn to self-regulate

A stimulating home environment supports how babies think and communicate

However, to our knowledge, no one has ever studied feeding, language development, and the home environment all together.

SECTION 2

Research questions

What we set out to answer

With the gap identified, we needed the right questions. These three aims shaped every research and methodological decision that followed:

AIM 1:

How do IT-HOME subscales relate to language exposure (measured by LENA device) at 3 and 12 months?

AIM 2:

How do IT-HOME subscales relate to infant feeding outcomes at 3 and 12 months?

AIM 3:

What do practicing SLPs believe about the home environment's role in early intervention - and are they actually acting on those beliefs?

why this matters

Understanding these connections helps us support child development more effectively - and gives parents meaningful guidance on the decisions that shape their baby's first year.

SECTION 3

methods

This study was conducted in two phases, each designed to answer a different set of research questions:

PHASE I

Longitudinal Observational Study

Home visits with full-term infants at 3 and 12 months of age

PHASE II

Speech-Language Pathologist (SLP) Survey

A national Qualtrics survey of 307 early intervention SLPs

PHASE I & II

How the Findings Interact

Connecting home environment data with SLP clinical practice

PHASE II

SLP Survey

A national Qualtrics survey of 307 early intervention SLPs

Phase I: Longitudinal observational study

Data for Phase I comes from a larger ongoing study examining the relationship between sucking, oral feeding, and vocal development in full-term infants. Home visits were conducted at 3 months and again at 12 months.

Families received an Amazon gift card for participating - $50 at the 3-month visit and $100 at 12 months.

What happened during a visit

We entered the family's home, set up our equipment, and completed the following:

  1. Non-Nutritive Suck (NNS) Assessment

Infant sucked on a custom research pacifier connected to a pressure transducer system and ADInstruments PowerLab for 5 minutes. LabChart Pro software analyzed the suck dynamics.

Measured:

NNS Amplitude · NNS Cycles/min · NNS Cycles/burst · NNS Frequency (Hz) · NNS Bursts/min

  1. Oral Feeding Skills (OFS)

Researcher observed and recorded a full bottle feed to assess the infant's oral feeding skills.

Measured:

Initial bottle intake (ml) · Transfer rate (ml/min) · Transfer volume (% volume) · Feeding proficiency

  1. Feeding Questionnaire - parent report

Caregiver completed a standardized feeding questionnaire while the researcher was present.

Measured:

Neo-EAT ( administered 3 months) · Pedi-EAT (administered at 12 months)

  1. LENA — language environment recording

Infant was fitted with a vest containing a Digital Language Processor worn for 12 hours to record the naturalistic language environment. Parents kept an hourly activity log.

Measured:

Child Vocalization Count (CVC) · Adult Word Count (AWC) · Conversational Turn Count (CTC) · Percent Time Vocalized

  1. IT-HOME Inventory

Researcher completed the 45-item Infant-Toddler HOME Inventory through observation and interview questions.

Subscales:

Responsivity · Acceptance · Organization · Learning Materials · Involvement · Variety of Daily Stimulation

Phase II: SLP Survey

The purpose of Phase II was to understand what clinicians actually knew - and did - when it came to the home environment.

survey design

An electronic survey was designed and launched via Qualtrics, distributed to early intervention SLPs through online Facebook forums. The survey consisted of 34 questions and took approximately 5 minutes to complete. Launched August 2019, closed January 2020. Participants were entered in a raffle to win a $50 Amazon gift card.

SECTION 4

Participants

Phase I: Longitudinal observational study

3 MONTHS

74

infants

51.4% male · Average age 2.97 months
90.5% no family history of speech-language issues
Majority Caucasian caregivers, primarily English-speaking
~66% of caregivers held graduate degrees

12 MONTHS

58

infants

30 male · Average age 11.87 months
Similar demographic profile to 3-month cohort
94.5% no family history of speech-language issues
~72% of caregivers held graduate degrees

Inclusion Criteria: Infants were included in this study if they were enrolled in the larger, ongoing study in the lab · Full-term birth (≥37 weeks gestation)

Phase II: SLP Survey

SLPs ranged from under 5 years to over 20 years of experience

0

0

Total responses recieved

0

0

Final sample after exclusions

0%

0%

Worked in home environment

Inclusion Criteria: To be included, participants were required to hold ASHA certification, provide consent to participate, and complete 100% of the survey

SECTION 5

Results

Phase I: Longitudinal observational study

Key findings

Spearman correlations revealed significant associations between specific IT-HOME subscales and infant feeding and language outcomes at both time points.

AT 3 MONTHS

IT-HOME Involvement -

IT-HOME Involvement

Positively associated with NNS Burst and OFS Initial. More involved caregivers had infants with stronger sucking patterns and better bottle intake.

rs=.354, p=.003 · rs=.329, p=.015

IT-HOME Variety -

IT-HOME Variety

Positively associated with OFS Transfer Volume and Transfer Rate. More varied home stimulation linked to better feeding efficiency.

rs=.543, p<.001 · rs=.289, p=.040

IT-HOME Acceptance -

IT-HOME Acceptance

Negatively associated with Neo-EAT Bottle Stability and Total. More accepting caregivers reported fewer feeding difficulties.

rs=-.290, p=.039 · rs=-.353, p=.019

IT-HOME Organization -

IT-HOME Organization

Positively associated with Child Vocalization, Conversational Turn Count, and Percent Time Vocalized. More regulated homes had more vocal infants.

rs=.254, p=.043 · rs=.265, p=.034 · rs=.293, p=.019

AT 12 MONTHS

IT-HOME Organization -

Negatively associated with PediEAT Physiology, Mealtime Behavior, Selective Eating, and Total. More regulated homes had fewer feeding difficulties at 12 months.

rs=-.281, p=.042 · rs=-.347, p=.012 · rs=-.313, p=.027 · rs=-.387, p=.006

IT-HOME Acceptance -

Positively associated with NNS Frequency. Less restrictive caregiving linked to faster sucking patterns.

rs=.543, p<.001 · rs=.289, p=.040

IT-HOME Acceptance -

Negatively associated with Neo-EAT Bottle Stability and Total. More accepting caregivers reported fewer feeding difficulties.

rs=.337, p=.037

IT-HOME Learning Materials -

Positively associated with NNS Cycles/Burst and Child Vocalizations. More stimulating play environments linked to stronger sucking and more vocalizations.

rs=.314, p=.048 · rs=.291, p=.048

Phase II: SLP Survey

What SLPs told us

162 early intervention SLPs completed the survey. What they said revealed a striking gap between knowledge and action.

0%

0%

Believe home environment plays a role in speech & language development

0%

0%

Believe it plays a role in feeding development

THE GAP — KNOWLEDGE VS. ACTION

51.23%

Of SLPs reported to always educate families on the home environment

12 MONTHS

25.31%

Of SLPs reported to always encourage families to actually change their home environment

12 MONTHS

25.31%

Of SLPs reported to always encourage families to actually change their home environment

SLPs know it matters - but most aren't acting on it.

SECTION 5

key Insights

Phase I & II: How the findings interact

What we learned

The home environment shapes both feeding and language development

Specific aspects of the home - how organized it is, how involved caregivers are, what materials are present - consistently predicted feeding and vocalization outcomes at both 3 and 12 months. And the aspects that mattered shifted as infants developed.

SLPs know it matters - but most aren't acting on it

Nearly all SLPs believe the home environment is important for speech-language development. But fewer than 1 in 4 are actively encouraging families to change it. There's no standardized approach - and that gap needs to be addressed.

Context matters - feeding time is underutilized

Research shows parents use more diverse language during feeding than during play - yet most early intervention focuses on play contexts. Mealtime is a missed opportunity for language and bonding that clinicians should be leveraging.

In summary: Different aspects of the home environment influence feeding and vocalizations early in infancy - and as the infant matures, different aspects become important. At 3 months, involvement and variety drive feeding outcomes. At 12 months, organization and learning materials take over.


SLPs know the home environment matters. But fewer than 1 in 4 are actively encouraging families to change it.

This research created a roadmap for when and how clinicians should intervene.

from research to practice - clinical personas

These findings don't just live in a journal - they translate directly into how clinicians should support families. Here's what that looks like in practice.

Baby Sam, 3 months

Presenting with feeding difficulties

WHAT THE RESEARCH TELLS US

At 3 months, IT-HOME Involvement and Acceptance predicted feeding outcomes. Caregiver responsiveness and positive reinforcement during feeding directly shaped how infants fed.

WHAT AN SLP SHOULD DO

Encourage caregivers to respond to hunger cues, educate on developmental milestones, and advocate for positive feeding experiences. A family-centered, multidisciplinary approach is critical at this stage.

Baby Maya, 12 months

Presenting with reduced vocalizations

WHAT THE RESEARCH TELLS US

At 12 months, IT-HOME Learning Materials predicted child vocalizations. Infants with more stimulating toys and play materials vocalized more - the home environment was directly shaping their language development.

WHAT AN SLP SHOULD DO

Advocate for age-appropriate toys and books at home. Teach caregivers how to use these materials to encourage interaction - and support with models, prompts, and feedback so changes actually stick.

WHAT THIS MEANS FOR FUTURE RESEARCH

More research is needed across different home environments and across activities within the same environment. As this study showed, context matters - the same home can provide very different developmental opportunities depending on whether an infant is feeding, playing, or just awake and listening. Future studies should examine these distinctions more closely.

SECTION 7

Reflections

What this research taught me: This was my first experience conducting rigorous mixed methods research from study design through statistical analysis through publication. Running home visits, fitting infants with LENA vests, administering standardized assessments, and analyzing SPSS data - gave me a research foundation I carry into every project I do today.

What I'd do differently: The survey sample (Phase II) was distributed through online SLP forums which may have introduced self-selection bias - SLPs who actively engage in online professional communities may not represent all early intervention practitioners. A more diverse recruitment strategy would strengthen generalizability.

What this means for UX: The same question that drove this research drives my UX work - there's a gap between what people know and what they actually do. Understanding that gap, and designing interventions to close it, is at the core of both clinical research and product research.

SECTION 8

Publications

Peer reviewed publications

This work (my graduate thesis) contributed to two peer-reviewed, NIH-funded publications - both publicly available and searchable:

MIDWIFERY · VOLUME 116 · JANUARY 2023 · NIH FUNDED

The home environment and its relation to bottle feeding outcomes in the first year of life

Martens A, Carpenito T, Hines M, Iizuka A, Aspinwall B, Zimmerman E

PEDIATRIC MEDICINE · 2022 · NIH FUNDED

The home environment and its relation to vocalizations in the first year of life

Hines M, Carpenito T, Martens A, Iizuka A, Aspinwall B, Zimmerman E

conference presentations

ASHA NATIONAL CONFERENCE · 2019

American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

Presented findings on the relationship between the home environment, infant feeding, and vocalizations to a national audience of speech-language pathologists and researchers.

RISE SYMPOSIUM · 2019

Northeastern University Research Symposium

Presented a poster on longitudinal findings connecting IT-HOME subscales to infant feeding and vocalization outcomes at 3 and 12 months.