University of York, York, UK.
Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.
Infancy. 2024 Mar-Apr;29(2):175-195. doi: 10.1111/infa.12578. Epub 2024 Jan 6.
Prior research suggests that across a wide range of cognitive, educational, and health-based measures, first-born children outperform their later-born peers. Expanding on this literature using naturalistic home-recorded data and parental vocabulary reports, we find that early language outcomes vary by number of siblings in a sample of 43 English-learning U.S. children from mid-to-high socioeconomic status homes. More specifically, we find that children in our sample with two or more-but not one-older siblings had smaller productive vocabularies at 18 months, and heard less input from caregivers across several measures than their peers with less than two siblings. We discuss implications regarding what infants experience and learn across a range of family sizes in infancy.
先前的研究表明,在广泛的认知、教育和健康指标上,头胎孩子的表现优于晚出生的兄弟姐妹。本研究利用自然记录的家庭数据和父母词汇报告,扩展了这一文献,结果发现,在一个来自中高社会经济地位家庭的 43 名美国英语学习者样本中,兄弟姐妹数量会影响早期语言发展。更具体地说,我们发现,在我们的样本中,有两个或更多(但不是一个)年长兄弟姐妹的孩子在 18 个月时的生产性词汇量较小,并且在几个指标上比有不到两个兄弟姐妹的同龄人从照顾者那里听到的输入更少。我们讨论了在婴儿期的不同家庭规模下,婴儿的体验和学习情况。