Abstract
Abstract
Internal state language (ISL) research contains knowledge gaps, including dimensionality and predictors of growth, addressed here in a two-aim study. Parent-reported expressive language from N = 6,373 monolingual, English-speaking toddlers (Mage = 23.5mos, 46% male, 57% white) was collected using cross-sectional and longitudinal data in WordBank. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses suggested a best-fitting one-factor model of ISL. The single-factor model of ISL was then submitted to hierarchical linear modeling to evaluate predictors of ISL development. Age 2 ISL production was predicted by child sex, wherein females outperform males, and maternal education, wherein higher education contributes to higher ISL. Only maternal education emerged as a significant predictor of ISL growth. These results provide support to theory suggesting a unitary construct of ISL, as opposed to considering ISL as categorical, and further illustrate linear growth through the second postnatal year that varies as a function of child sex and maternal education.
Funder
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
National Institute of Mental Health
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Reference63 articles.
1. Attachment organization and the early development of internal state language: A longitudinal perspective;Lemche;International Journal of Behavioral Development,2007
2. Kristen, S. , Chiarella, S. , Sodian, B. , Aureli, T. , Genco, M. , & Poulin-Dubois, D. (2014). Crosslinguistic developmental consistency in the composition of toddlers’ internal state vocabulary: Evidence from four languages. Child Development Research, Article ID 575142. https://doi.org/10.1155/2014/575142
3. Wordbank: An open repository for developmental vocabulary data;Frank;Journal of Child Language,2016
4. Role of the cognitive internal state lexicon in reading comprehension;Booth;Journal of Educational Psychology,1994