Author:
TAMIS-LEMONDA CATHERINE S.,BORNSTEIN MARC H.,KAHANA-KALMAN RONIT,BAUMWELL LISA,CYPHERS LISA
Abstract
In a longitudinal investigation of 40 child–mother dyads,
we examined
prediction from three indexes of children's own language: (1) vocal
imitations, (2) first spontaneous words in production, and (3) receptive
language starting at 0;9, and their mothers' verbal responsiveness
at 0;9
and 1;1, to the developmental onset of three significant language
milestones of the second year: (1) 50 words in productive language, (2)
combinatorial speech, and (3) the use of language to express a memory.
In these analyses, we utilized EVENTS HISTORY ANALYSIS, a statistical
technique well suited to questions concerning when in development
certain events begin and the extent to which predictors influence the
timing of those events. The timing of children's first words in production,
the timing of their achievement of 50 words in receptive
language, and maternal responsiveness at 1;1 each contributed uniquely
to variation in the timing of the three language milestones. When child
and mother factors were considered together, the onset of the three
language milestones differed by as much as 0;5 months for children in
the lower and upper 10th percentiles of the predictor variables. The
present findings contribute to generating and testing specific models
about child and mother factors thought to explain variation in key
aspects of children's second-year language development.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
General Psychology,Linguistics and Language,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
86 articles.
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