Ramírez-Esparza Nairán, García-Sierra Adrián, Kuhl Patricia K
Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Connecticut, StorrsCT, United States.
Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences, University of Connecticut, StorrsCT, United States.
Front Psychol. 2017 Jun 20;8:1008. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01008. eCollection 2017.
In previous studies, we found that the social interactions infants experience in their everyday lives at 11- and 14-months of age affect language ability at 24 months of age. These studies investigated relationships between the speech style (i.e., parentese speech vs. standard speech) and social context [i.e., one-on-one (1:1) vs. group] of language input in infancy and later speech development (i.e., at 24 months of age), controlling for socioeconomic status (SES). Results showed that the amount of exposure to parentese speech-1:1 in infancy was related to productive vocabulary at 24 months. The general goal of the present study was to investigate changes in (1) the pattern of social interactions between caregivers and their children from infancy to childhood and (2) relationships among speech style, social context, and language learning across time. Our study sample consisted of 30 participants from the previously published infant studies, evaluated at 33 months of age. Social interactions were assessed at home using digital first-person perspective recordings of the auditory environment. We found that caregivers use less parentese speech-1:1, and more standard speech-1:1, as their children get older. Furthermore, we found that the effects of parentese speech-1:1 in infancy on later language development at 24 months persist at 33 months of age. Finally, we found that exposure to standard speech-1:1 in childhood was the only social interaction that related to concurrent word production/use. Mediation analyses showed that standard speech-1:1 in childhood fully mediated the effects of parentese speech-1:1 in infancy on language development in childhood, controlling for SES. This study demonstrates that engaging in one-on-one interactions in infancy and later in life has important implications for language development.
在之前的研究中,我们发现婴儿在11个月和14个月大时在日常生活中所经历的社交互动会影响其24个月大时的语言能力。这些研究调查了婴儿期语言输入的言语风格(即儿语与标准言语)和社交环境[即一对一(1:1)与群体]与后期言语发展(即24个月大时)之间的关系,并控制了社会经济地位(SES)。结果表明,婴儿期接触儿语-一对一的时长与24个月大时的产出性词汇量有关。本研究的总体目标是调查:(1)从婴儿期到儿童期,照顾者与其孩子之间社交互动模式的变化;(2)言语风格、社交环境和语言学习随时间的关系。我们的研究样本包括之前已发表的婴儿研究中的30名参与者,在他们33个月大时进行评估。使用听觉环境的数字第一人称视角录音在家中评估社交互动。我们发现,随着孩子长大,照顾者使用儿语-一对一的情况减少,而使用标准言语-一对一的情况增多。此外,我们发现婴儿期儿语-一对一对24个月大时后期语言发展的影响在33个月大时仍然存在。最后,我们发现儿童期接触标准言语-一对一是与同时期单词产出/使用相关的唯一社交互动。中介分析表明,在控制SES的情况下,儿童期标准言语-一对一完全中介了婴儿期儿语-一对一对儿童期语言发展的影响。这项研究表明,在婴儿期及以后进行一对一互动对语言发展具有重要意义。