The Tomatis Method
and The Listening Program
Author: Dr. Siegfried Othmer
Last week we had a visit from Martha Mack, a Tomatis practitioner
in Melbourne Australia. Martha and her husband George have been
running the Listen and Learn Center where both auditory training
and neurofeedback are being offered. (See www.ListenAndLearn.com.au)
Martha emigrated from Argentina some years ago to take up her
psychology practice in Australia. The birth of a daughter with
auditory processing disorder redirected her focus from a practice
oriented to PTSD and chronic pain to one dealing with auditory
processing problems. A French psychologist had immigrated to Australia
to spread the word about Tomatis, so she got involved in that
approach early on. Some five years ago Martha did training with
Ron Minson in Denver (who also did our training years ago and
gave us our introduction to the Tomatis Method). And Martha adopted
The Listening Program as a complement to her practice some three
years ago. Movement therapies are part of their offering as well.
We met George at the class in Cleveland, where he was brushing
up his neurofeedback skills.
At this point, incidentally, the daughter is seventeen years
old and the issues around auditory processing have been essentially
resolved. There are still some memory and concentration issues
outstanding. Recently Martha and George got some notice from the
local TV program Second Opinion, so the business side is looking
up as well.
I had been aware of Tomatis longer than I have known about neurofeedback,
so somehow I had the idea of Tomatis as being well before our
time. Actually, he died on Christmas Day 2001, so he has really
been more our contemporary. He was of course ahead of his time.
Born to an opera singer on January 1, 1920, and discarded at birth,
he was pulled from oblivion in a trashcan by his grandmother,
who yanked him out by his ear and decided to keep him alive. He
became an ear-nose-and throat specialist. He pioneered prenatal
psychology by proposing that listening and consequently dialogue
with the mother begins in the womb. His early theories along these
lines first received recognition in 1957. This did not keep him
from being ousted from the French Academy of Sciences for his
strange ideas about auditory processing disorders and their treatment
using auditory challenges.
It turns out that audition is the first functional sensory system
at 16 weeks in gestation.
Further, it appears that laterality differences are already present
in cochlear processing of sound, and that cortical functional
differentiation with respect to auditory processing actually occurs
later, well after birth. The latter may follow from the cochlear
differentiation that gives preference to temporal processing to
the right ear (left hemisphere) and to frequency-space processing
to the left ear in standard brains.
Tomatis proposed that the voice can be a clue to what the ear
is capable of hearing, and that training the ear to hear better
will then be reflected in the voice and can be tracked. There
is both a passive listening phase and an active speaking and listening
phase of the training, and the music used as the stimulus is adapted
to the particular properties of the child’s auditory responding.
There is both a high-frequency emphasis in the training, for which
someone like Mozart is used, and a lower-frequency emphasis, for
which something like Gregorian chant is used.
Interestingly, a variety of disorders that are correlated with
Auditory Processing Disorder tend to also remediate with the auditory
intervention. These include developmental delay, communication
and language delay (expressive and receptive language), dyslexia
and learning disabilities, and dyspraxia. But they also include
problems with attention, concentration and focus, memory, coordination
and balance, gross and fine motor control, general clumsiness,
and even visual perceptual and spatial organization deficits.
And finally, they include problem of social relating.
This all becomes concrete when one surveys the extensive manner
in which the effects of The Tomatis Method are tracked through
the process. The principal categories are:
1) Mood
2) Positive Behaviors (incl. compliance, expression of affection,
curiosity)
3) Negative Behaviors (repetitious behavior, anxiety, aggressiveness,
tantrums)
4) Tactile Sensitivity
5) Auditory Sensitivity
6) Motor Skills (incl. balance, coordination)
7) Spatial Awareness
8) Receptive Language
9) Expressive Language
10) Social Language (non-verbal/verbal communication, familiar/unfamiliar
relationships)
11) Academic Skills (incl. reading, writing)
12) Energy Level and Attention
13) Memory
14) Concentration
15) Social Behavior (eye contact)
16) Tactile Communication
17) Social Interaction
18) Adaptability
19) Fears
I am now beginning to hear all of this very differently than
when the lecture started out. These problems are not just those
that could be considered secondary to a primary auditory processing
disorder, although individually many of them could be. These are
many of our favorite “Problems of Disregulation.” I asked Martha
where neurofeedback fits into her work, and she said that she
does the auditory training first, and then mops up the residual
issues with neurofeedback. Quite clearly she is using auditory
processing work for the general purpose of enhanced self-regulation
as well as to resolve the specific auditory processing problem.
If that is the case, then perhaps the entire business of The
Listening Program ® and of The Tomatis Method ® should be considered
firstly from the vantage point of challenging and training the
frequency basis of brain organization. Once such organization
is in place, a number of things resolve, including auditory processing
problems. The processing of auditory information imposes the tightest
constraints on the temporal integrity of brain processes. After
all, time differences of less than one millisecond must be resolved
at the brainstem if we are to localize sound properly. If we cannot
localize sound properly, then we are overwhelmed by more than
one conversation going on in a room, and auditory figure/ground
separation becomes problematic. Further, the distinctions in sounds
that children have difficulty differentiating (e.g., ba versus
da) may take up no more than 40 milliseconds at the beginning
of words. Once hearing and listening becomes effortful to accomplish,
one is reduced to low-level functioning of decoding rather than
devoting resources to higher-level analysis of content.
Tomatis became aware early on of problems in processing the higher
frequencies, to which most of the hair cells in cochlea are in
fact devoted. But there has been a shift toward attending to the
lower frequency processing, and that holds true for the latest
generation of The Listening Program as well. It makes sense to
me that the lower frequency issues need to be taken care of first,
before the high frequency domain opens up for us. The lower frequencies
are more directly encoded in terms of their actual waveforms,
whereas the high frequencies are encoded more like an FFT, in
terms of spectral amplitudes. The relative phases of the waveforms
are therefore available only in the lower frequency domain. At
high frequencies, we must depend for localization information
on the envelope of the activity, on the ebb and flow of amplitude,
and thus on arrival time differences.
We have long known in neurofeedback that we don’t necessarily
do a good job with auditory processing problems. Complementary
methods may well be needed, and for that specific objective, The
Listening Program filled the bill at our own office. Sue has recently
taken the re-qualification training and received the latest set
of auditorily processed discs. It is satisfying to observe that
the auditory materials seem to be much more refined than what
was available earlier, and that the low frequency regime is now
being covered as a first order of business, under the rubric of
“Sensory Integration Training.”
The Listing Program (www.Advancedbrain.com)
is produced by Alex Doman, of Doman family fame. It is recommended
that if the training is found to be beneficial, then it should
be maintained over time at some repetition rate in order to maintain
the gains, although clearly people don’t backslide to anything
like the original baseline. Benefits typically hold some 9-12
months. So it is appropriate to think of The Listening Program
as part of a continuing home use program.
I am tempted to think of a continuum in the frequency domain
here, where the EEG neurofeedback takes us comfortably up to the
range of 40-60 Hz. The range out to several hundred Hz could be
covered with the low frequency part of the Tomatis Method or the
low and mid-frequency portion of The Listening Program. The high
frequency regime would be covered by the more traditional high-frequency
training in both. We should evaluate whether the auditory challenge
should become a regular part of the neurofeedback regime. And
we might even ask the question whether auditory training could
be helpful during the earliest stages of working with the autistic
spectrum.
It is already well known that many autistic children benefit
significantly from auditory training. If calming can be achieved
thereby, could it be that that might actually be an easier way
to get started than neurofeedback? Are headphones less of a battle
than electrodes on the scalp? The low frequency part of the training
could even be started, if necessary, without headphones. And perhaps
the world divides, with some children easier to get started on
the auditory program than on neurofeedback, the reverse being
true for others. When Martha combines auditory training with neurofeedback
in a single session, she does the auditory work first in a two-hour
session.
Many of the autistic children who come to us are already doing
The Listening Program, and they clearly still need our help through
neurofeedback. The Tomatis Program is a stronger offering, but
at the cost of much greater complexity, larger instrumental cost,
and much more extensive clinician training. Martha Mack uses The
Tomatis Method about 60% of the time, the Listening Program some
40% (the latter on a home use basis). Among other reasons, Martha
prefers the Tomatis because she is more actively involved in that
process. An advantage of The Listening Program is that the parents
get to do it along with the child.
Martha uses the auditory TOVA ® for evaluation, and finds that
the results differ from the visual TOVA not only for reaction
time and variability but also for omission and commission errors.
Interestingly, clinicians in the network who focus on learning
disabilities tend to rely more on the auditory TOVA. It is a tougher
screen. Our response will be to hasten to prepare an auditory
version of the QIKtest, albeit one that is not quite so long as
the TOVA. We will also use higher frequency tones, which will
put us in a frequency range that is more relevant to the observed
language processing deficits.
Reference: Dorinne S. Davis, “Sound Bodies and Sound Therapy”
Dr. Siegfried Othmer |