Iverson Jana M, Longobardi Emiddia, Caselli M Cristina
Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Missouri-Columbia, Columbia, MO 65211, USA.
Int J Lang Commun Disord. 2003 Apr-Jun;38(2):179-97. doi: 10.1080/1368282031000062891.
Previous research has emphasized the importance of gesture in early communicative development. These studies have reported that gestures are used frequently during the first two years of life and may play a transitional role in the language acquisition process. Although there are now numerous descriptions of the relationship between gesture and the developing language system in typically-developing (TD) children, relatively little is known about the nature and early development of the gesture-language system in children with developmental disorders involving specific profiles of language delay and/or impairment.
The aim of this study is to compare early word and gesture use in children with DS and in typically-developing children to investigate potential differences in the relationship between gestural and verbal communication in early language development.
Ten children from upper-middle class families participated in the study. The five children with DS (3 boys and 2 girls) had an average chronological age of 47.6 months, an average mental age of 22.4 months, and an average language age of 18 months. Each child with DS was matched to a typically developing child on the basis of gender, language age, and observed expressive vocabulary size. Children were videotaped for 30 minutes as they interacted spontaneously with their mothers. All communicative and intelligible gestures and words produced by the children were transcribed from the videotapes. Data analyses focused on: a) overall production of gestures and words (i.e., gesture and word tokens); b) the size of children's gestural and verbal repertoires (i.e., gesture and word types); and c) production and informational content of gesture-word combinations.
Although children with DS had significantly smaller gestural repertoires than their language age-matched peers, there was no reliable difference between the two groups in the overall use of gesture. In addition, with DS produced two-element combinations (primarily gesture-word combinations) and did so at a rate comparable to that observed among their TD counterparts. However, no two-word combinations were observed among children with DS, and there were also group differences in the information contained in children's gesture-word combinations.
Taken together, these findings suggest that in addition to the well-documented global delays in early communicative development, children with DS may exhibit additional pockets of delay, specifically in making the transition from one- to two-word speech. Results are further discussed in terms of their implications for understanding the organization of the developing gesture-language system and for the assessment of gesture in young children with communicative delays and disorders.
先前的研究强调了手势在早期交流发展中的重要性。这些研究报告称,手势在生命的头两年中被频繁使用,并且可能在语言习得过程中发挥过渡作用。尽管现在有许多关于典型发育(TD)儿童手势与语言发展系统之间关系的描述,但对于患有涉及特定语言延迟和/或损伤特征的发育障碍儿童的手势-语言系统的性质和早期发展却知之甚少。
本研究的目的是比较唐氏综合征(DS)儿童和典型发育儿童早期单词和手势的使用情况,以调查早期语言发展中手势与言语交流之间关系的潜在差异。
来自中上层阶级家庭的10名儿童参与了该研究。5名患有DS的儿童(3名男孩和2名女孩)的平均实际年龄为47.6个月,平均心理年龄为22.4个月,平均语言年龄为18个月。根据性别、语言年龄和观察到的表达性词汇量,为每名患有DS的儿童匹配一名典型发育儿童。当孩子们与他们的母亲自发互动时,对他们进行30分钟的录像。孩子们做出的所有交流性和可理解的手势及单词都从录像带中转录下来。数据分析集中在:a)手势和单词的总体产生(即手势和单词标记);b)儿童手势和言语库的大小(即手势和单词类型);c)手势-单词组合的产生和信息内容。
尽管患有DS的儿童手势库明显小于与其语言年龄匹配的同龄人,但两组在手势的总体使用上没有可靠的差异。此外,患有DS的儿童产生了双元素组合(主要是手势-单词组合),并且产生的速率与在他们的TD同龄人中观察到的速率相当。然而,在患有DS的儿童中未观察到双词组合,并且在儿童的手势-单词组合中包含的信息方面也存在组间差异。
综上所述,这些发现表明,除了在早期交流发展中已充分记录的全面延迟外,患有DS 的儿童可能还表现出额外的延迟点,特别是在从单词语向双词语的过渡方面。将根据这些结果对理解发育中的手势-语言系统的组织以及对有交流延迟和障碍的幼儿手势评估的意义进行进一步讨论。