
Toronto mom creates app to help track babies' speech and language
CBC
Maryam Nabavi says she had a feeling something wasn't quite right when her then one-year-old son wasn't saying 'mama' or 'dada.'
She says her pediatrician wasn't initially concerned. When she was finally referred to Toronto's free speech therapy program, she was told there could be up to a year-long wait.
"Within that time I noticed my son was really frustrated, throwing tantrums, banging his head on the floor, so I reached out to a private speech-language pathologist for help," she said.
Nabavi took matters into her own hands, knowing how crucial that time period would be for her son's learning and development.
"Within a few sessions I learned strategies that helped my son communicate first through gestures and then eventually through words."
"These strategies were so simple that it made me think, 'why did we have to wait for almost a year to get the coaching we desperately needed?'"
Using the tools she learned from experts, Nabavi spearheaded the development of an app called Babbly, which uses artificial intelligence technology to help parents track their baby's speech and language milestones.
She says the app was launched in 2020 and has thousands of downloads.
"It's really important to give children the tools to communicate as well as the parents the understanding that they're the ones who are in power."
"And with very few strategies [the parents] were actually able to change the trajectory of their child's development and help them to close the gap."
Nabavi's app caught the attention of Google, which is now supporting her team through an accelerator program for voice AI startups.
Talia Leszcz, a Toronto based speech-language pathologist says she was impressed by the potential she sees in the app.
"I work with parents and young children in the public system, so the idea of an app that would help empower parents and give them tools that we were giving them in person, was really exciting to me," she said.
Leszcz says she understands the anxiety parents might feel while waiting for answers.