Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
J Neurodev Disord. 2011 Dec;3(4):388-404. doi: 10.1007/s11689-011-9098-z. Epub 2011 Nov 19.
Growing evidence supports the notion that dynamic gene expression, subject to epigenetic control, organizes multiple influences to enable a child to learn to listen and to talk. Here, we review neurobiological and genetic influences on spoken language development in the context of results of a longitudinal trial of cochlear implantation of young children with severe to profound sensorineural hearing loss in the Childhood Development after Cochlear Implantation study. We specifically examine the results of cochlear implantation in participants who were congenitally deaf (N = 116). Prior to intervention, these participants were subject to naturally imposed constraints in sensory (acoustic-phonologic) inputs during critical phases of development when spoken language skills are typically achieved rapidly. Their candidacy for a cochlear implant was prompted by delays (n = 20) or an essential absence of spoken language acquisition (n = 96). Observations thus present an opportunity to evaluate the impact of factors that influence the emergence of spoken language, particularly in the context of hearing restoration in sensitive periods for language acquisition. Outcomes demonstrate considerable variation in spoken language learning, although significant advantages exist for the congenitally deaf children implanted prior to 18 months of age. While age at implantation carries high predictive value in forecasting performance on measures of spoken language, several factors show significant association, particularly those related to parent-child interactions. Importantly, the significance of environmental variables in their predictive value for language development varies with age at implantation. These observations are considered in the context of an epigenetic model in which dynamic genomic expression can modulate aspects of auditory learning, offering insights into factors that can influence a child's acquisition of spoken language after cochlear implantation. Increased understanding of these interactions could lead to targeted interventions that interact with the epigenome to influence language outcomes with intervention, particularly in periods in which development is subject to time-sensitive experience.
越来越多的证据支持这样一种观点,即动态基因表达受表观遗传控制,整合多种影响,使儿童能够学会听和说。在这里,我们在儿童发展后耳蜗植入研究中对患有严重至极重度感觉神经性听力损失的幼儿进行耳蜗植入的纵向试验结果的背景下,回顾了神经生物学和遗传对口语发展的影响。我们特别研究了先天性耳聋(N=116)参与者的耳蜗植入结果。在干预之前,这些参与者在口语技能通常迅速获得的关键发育阶段,受到自然施加的感官(声-音位)输入限制。他们有资格进行耳蜗植入是因为语言习得延迟(n=20)或口语语言习得的基本缺失(n=96)。因此,这些观察结果为评估影响口语出现的因素提供了机会,特别是在语言习得敏感时期听力恢复的情况下。结果表明,口语学习存在很大的差异,尽管植入年龄在 18 个月之前的先天性耳聋儿童具有显著优势。虽然植入年龄对预测口语语言能力的测量具有很高的预测价值,但有几个因素与语言发展显著相关,特别是与父母-子女互动相关的因素。重要的是,环境变量在其对语言发展的预测价值中的重要性随植入年龄而变化。这些观察结果在表观遗传模型的背景下进行了考虑,其中动态基因组表达可以调节听觉学习的各个方面,为可以影响儿童耳蜗植入后获得口语语言的因素提供了见解。增加对这些相互作用的理解可能会导致靶向干预,这些干预与表观基因组相互作用,以影响干预后的语言结果,特别是在发展受时间敏感体验影响的时期。