D'Souza Dean, D'Souza Hana, Johnson Mark H, Karmiloff-Smith Annette
Centre for Brain and Cognitive Development, Department of Psychological Sciences, Birkbeck, University of London, London, United Kingdom.
Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2015 Oct 1;10(10):e0139319. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0139319. eCollection 2015.
Typically developing (TD) infants enhance their learning of spoken language by observing speakers' mouth movements. Given the fact that word learning is seriously delayed in most children with neurodevelopmental disorders, we hypothesized that this delay partly results from differences in visual face scanning, e.g., focusing attention away from the mouth. To test this hypothesis, we used an eye tracker to measure visual attention in 95 infants and toddlers with Down syndrome (DS), fragile X syndrome (FXS), and Williams syndrome (WS), and compared their data to 25 chronological- and mental-age matched 16-month-old TD controls. We presented participants with two talking faces (one on each side of the screen) and a sound (/ga/). One face (the congruent face) mouthed the syllable that the participants could hear (i.e., /ga/), while the other face (the incongruent face) mouthed a different syllable (/ba/) from the one they could hear. As expected, we found that TD children with a relatively large vocabulary made more fixations to the mouth region of the incongruent face than elsewhere. However, toddlers with FXS or WS who had a relatively large receptive vocabulary made more fixations to the eyes (rather than the mouth) of the incongruent face. In DS, by contrast, fixations to the speaker's overall face (rather than to her eyes or mouth) predicted vocabulary size. These findings suggest that, at some point in development, different processes or strategies relating to visual attention are involved in language acquisition in DS, FXS, and WS. This knowledge may help further explain why language is delayed in children with neurodevelopmental disorders. It also raises the possibility that syndrome-specific interventions should include an early focus on efficient face-scanning behaviour.
发育正常(TD)的婴儿通过观察说话者的口部动作来增强对口语的学习。鉴于大多数神经发育障碍儿童的词汇学习严重延迟,我们推测这种延迟部分是由于视觉面部扫描的差异,例如将注意力从口部移开。为了验证这一假设,我们使用眼动仪测量了95名患有唐氏综合征(DS)、脆性X综合征(FXS)和威廉姆斯综合征(WS)的婴幼儿的视觉注意力,并将他们的数据与25名年龄和心理年龄匹配的16个月大的TD对照组进行了比较。我们向参与者展示了两张说话的脸(屏幕两侧各一张)和一个声音(/ga/)。一张脸(一致脸)说出参与者能听到的音节(即/ga/),而另一张脸(不一致脸)说出与他们听到的不同的音节(/ba/)。正如预期的那样,我们发现词汇量相对较大的TD儿童对不一致脸的口部区域注视次数比其他地方更多。然而,接受性词汇量相对较大的FXS或WS幼儿对不一致脸的眼睛(而非口部)注视次数更多。相比之下,在DS中,对说话者整个面部(而非其眼睛或口部)的注视次数可以预测词汇量大小。这些发现表明,在发育的某个阶段,DS、FXS和WS的语言习得涉及与视觉注意力相关的不同过程或策略。这一知识可能有助于进一步解释为什么神经发育障碍儿童会出现语言延迟。这也增加了一种可能性,即特定综合征的干预措施应包括早期关注有效的面部扫描行为。