Department of Psychology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
Int J Lang Commun Disord. 2023 May;58(3):672-686. doi: 10.1111/1460-6984.12809. Epub 2022 Nov 24.
Early in development, caregivers' object labelling contributes to children's word learning. Language development is a bi-directional process, and differences in joint engagement (JE) and language among children with developmental disabilities such as autism spectrum disorder (ASD) may provide caregivers varying contexts and opportunities to provide object labels. However, potential variation in caregivers' production of object labels and its relation to language development remain relatively unexplored among toddlers with ASD.
This study characterized the structural and functional features of object labels produced by parents of children with typical (TL) or elevated likelihood (EL) of ASD during naturalistic toy play. We examined features of object labels within two JE contexts, supported and coordinated JE, which are differentiated by a child's use of eye contact, as well as their relations with concurrent and future child language skills.
METHODS & PROCEDURES: The present study included 55 (TL = 12, EL = 43) children who completed a naturalistic parent-child interaction in the home at 18 months of age. Children's expressive and receptive language was assessed at 18, 24 and 36 months. At 36 months, EL children were assessed for ASD and classified as either EL-No Diagnosis, EL-Language Delay or EL-ASD. Videos of interactions were divided into discrete engagement states, including supported and coordinated JE. All parent speech was transcribed and coded to capture structural (types, tokens, mean length of utterance (MLU), sentence position) and functional (follow-in comments, directives, lead-in labels) features of object labels as well as parent prompts for the child to produce a label.
OUTCOMES & RESULTS: Parents of toddlers across outcome groups labelled objects at similar rates within each engagement state. However, parents of EL-ASD children provided the lowest rates of prompts for labels in supported JE and the highest rate of labels as the final word of an utterance (sentence-final position) in coordinated JE. Additionally, parent prompts in supported JE were related to concurrent child expressive language. Labels in sentence-final position were positively related to later language outcome when delivered in supported JE but were associated with poorer language outcomes when delivered in coordinated JE.
CONCLUSIONS & IMPLICATIONS: Subtle differences in parent object labels across outcome groups demonstrate the role that child language and social engagement can play in influencing parent input and the cascading impact of this input on language development.
What is already known on this subject Variations in caregiver object labelling can impact child language development. However, child characteristics such as language ability also actively shape the input caregivers provide, demonstrating the bi-directionality of language development. What this paper adds to existing knowledge The present study demonstrates that characteristics of the engagement context in which a label is delivered may be important for understanding how object labelling relates to child language acquisition and whether this relation varies for children who face challenges in language learning. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work? As child differences in social engagement emerge, parents may be more attuned to moments their children are engaging with eye contact. Caregiver-mediated interventions might consider strategies that guide caregivers in recognizing engagement without eye contact as a similarly meaningful opportunity for learning and encourage the use of rich input within these moments.
在早期发展中,照料者的物体命名有助于儿童的词汇学习。语言发展是一个双向的过程,具有自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)等发育障碍的儿童在联合参与(JE)和语言方面的差异可能为照料者提供不同的环境和机会来提供物体标签。然而,ASD 儿童的照料者在提供物体标签方面的潜在差异及其与语言发展的关系在 ASD 幼儿中仍相对未得到探索。
本研究描述了在自然玩具游戏中,具有典型(TL)或自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)高可能性(EL)儿童的父母所产生的物体标签的结构和功能特征。我们检查了在两种 JE 背景下的物体标签特征,即支持性 JE 和协调性 JE,它们通过儿童使用眼神接触进行区分,以及它们与同时和未来儿童语言技能的关系。
本研究包括 55 名儿童(TL=12,EL=43),他们在 18 个月大时在家中完成了自然的亲子互动。儿童的表达和接受语言在 18、24 和 36 个月时进行评估。在 36 个月时,EL 儿童接受了 ASD 评估,并分为 EL-无诊断、EL-语言延迟或 EL-ASD。互动视频被分为离散的参与状态,包括支持性 JE 和协调性 JE。所有父母的讲话都被转录并编码,以捕捉物体标签的结构(类型、标记、平均话语长度(MLU)、句子位置)和功能(后续评论、指令、引导标签)特征,以及父母提示孩子生成标签。
在每个参与状态下,来自不同结局组的幼儿的父母以相似的速度标记物体。然而,EL-ASD 儿童的父母在支持性 JE 中提供标签提示的比例最低,在协调性 JE 中提供标签的比例最高(句子的最后一个位置)。此外,支持性 JE 中的父母提示与同时的儿童表达语言有关。在支持性 JE 中提供的最后一个单词位置的标签与后期语言结果呈正相关,但在协调性 JE 中提供时与较差的语言结果相关。
不同结局组的父母在物体标签上的细微差异表明,儿童的语言和社会参与能力在影响父母的输入以及这种输入对语言发展的级联影响方面起着重要作用。
本研究的意义是什么?
现有的研究已经证实,照顾者物体标签的变化会影响儿童的语言发展。
儿童的语言能力等特征也会积极影响照顾者提供的输入,从而展示语言发展的双向性。
本研究有哪些新发现?
这项工作的潜在或实际临床意义是什么?
当儿童的社会参与差异出现时,父母可能会更加关注儿童与目光接触的互动时刻。
可以考虑通过中介干预来指导父母识别无目光接触的参与,这同样是学习的重要机会,并鼓励在这些时刻使用丰富的输入。