Green Jordan R, Wilson Erin M
Department of Special Education and Communication Disorders, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 318 Barkley Center, Lincoln, NE 68583, USA.
Dev Psychobiol. 2006 Jan;48(1):16-28. doi: 10.1002/dev.20112.
Early spontaneous orofacial movements have rarely been studied experimentally, though the motor experiences gained from these behaviors may influence the development of motor skills emerging for speech. This investigation quantitatively describes developmental changes in silent, spontaneous lip and jaw movements from 1 to 12 months of age using optically based 3D motion capture technology. Twenty-nine typically developing infants at five ages (1, 5, 7, 9, and 12 months) were studied cross-sectionally. Infants exhibited spontaneous facial movements at all ages studied. Several age-related changes were detected in lip and jaw kinematics: the occurrence of spontaneous movements increased, movement speed increased, the duration of movement epochs decreased and movement coupling among different facial regions increased. Additionally, evidence for stereotypic movements was not strong. The present findings suggest that, during the first year of life, early spontaneous facial movements undergo significant developmental change in the direction of skill development for speech.
早期自发的口面部运动很少经过实验研究,尽管从这些行为中获得的运动体验可能会影响言语中出现的运动技能的发展。本研究使用基于光学的3D运动捕捉技术,定量描述了1至12个月大婴儿安静、自发的唇部和下颌运动的发育变化。对五个年龄段(1、5、7、9和12个月)的29名发育正常的婴儿进行了横断面研究。在所研究的所有年龄段,婴儿均表现出自发性面部运动。在唇部和下颌运动学方面检测到了一些与年龄相关的变化:自发运动的发生率增加、运动速度增加、运动时段的持续时间减少以及不同面部区域之间的运动耦合增加。此外,刻板运动的证据并不充分。目前的研究结果表明,在生命的第一年,早期自发的面部运动在朝着言语技能发展的方向上经历了显著的发育变化。