Affiliation:
1. Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis
2. Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences, University of Connecticut, Storrs
Abstract
Purpose:
The purpose of this study is to examine parent-reported ratings of temperament in toddlers with and without prelingual hearing loss.
Method:
The parent-completed Early Childhood Behavior Questionnaire (ECBQ) was used to assess temperament in toddlers aged 18–36 months. Three dimensions of temperament were examined: surgency, negative affectivity, and effortful control. Analyses were conducted to (a) examine differences in temperament across toddlers with and without prelingual hearing loss; (b) examine possible associations between temperament, demographic, and communication factors; and (c) determine if the ECBQ is sensitive to differences in hearing, communication, and listening skills among toddlers with prelingual hearing loss.
Results:
The parent-completed ECBQ revealed that toddlers with prelingual hearing loss differed from their hearing peers on some but not all dimensions of temperament. Specifically, children with prelingual hearing loss were rated as displaying higher levels of surgency and lower levels of effortful control but comparable levels of negative affectivity when compared to their hearing peers. Regression analyses revealed that chronological age and communication strategy predicted scores of effortful control in toddlers with prelingual hearing loss, whereas chronological age alone predicted scores of effortful control in toddlers with hearing. Finally, the ECBQ appears to contain “listening” items that skew (lower) levels of effortful control in toddlers with prelingual hearing loss, such that only the group effect of higher levels of surgency remained after removing these “listening” items. Correlations between the original and our modified ECBQ (removing the “listening” items) revealed strong associations, reflective of high construct validity.
Conclusions:
This was the first study to measure temperament in toddlers with prelingual hearing loss using the ECBQ. Our results revealed differences between children with and without prelingual hearing loss centering on the dimension of surgency. Examining differences in temperament during the toddler period of development may be particularly important and useful for predicting functional outcomes following prelingual hearing loss.
Publisher
American Speech Language Hearing Association
Subject
Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Reference36 articles.
1. American Academy of Audiology. (2013). American Academy of Audiology Clinical practice guidelines: Pediatric amplification.
2. Interactive Effects of Temperament and Family-Related Environmental Confusion on Spoken Language in Children Who Are Deaf and Hard of Hearing
3. Preschool speech intelligibility and vocabulary skills predict long-term speech and language outcomes following cochlear implantation in early childhood
4. Psychosocial Outcomes in Long-Term Cochlear Implant Users
5. Castellanos, I., Pisoni, D. B., & Kronenberger, W. G. (2020). I should do as I say, not as I do: Self-regulation and psychosocial outcomes in deaf children with cochlear implants. In M. Marschark & H. Knoors (Eds.), The Oxford handbook of deaf studies in learning and cognition (pp. 167–176). Oxford University Press.