Mothers' use of touch across infants' development and its implications for word learning: Evidence from Korean dyadic interactions

Author:

Ko Eon‐Suk1ORCID,Abu‐Zhaya Rana2ORCID,Kim Eun‐Sol3,Kim Taehyeong45,On Kyung‐Woon6,Kim Hyunji1,Zhang Byoung‐Tak7,Seidl Amanda8

Affiliation:

1. Department of English Language and Literature Chosun University Gwangju Korea

2. School of Psychology The University of Plymouth Plymouth UK

3. Department of Computer Science Hanyang University Seoul Korea

4. AI Lab CTO Division LG Electronics Seoul Korea

5. Department of Biosystems Engineering Seoul National University Seoul Korea

6. Kakao Brain Seongnam Korea

7. Department of Computer Science and Engineering & SNU Artificial Intelligence Institute Seoul National University Seoul Korea

8. Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences Purdue University Indiana West Lafayette USA

Abstract

AbstractCaregivers' touches that occur alongside words and utterances could aid in the detection of word/utterance boundaries and the mapping of word forms to word meanings. We examined changes in caregivers' use of touches with their speech directed to infants using a multimodal cross‐sectional corpus of 35 Korean mother‐child dyads across three age groups of infants (8, 14, and 27 months). We tested the hypothesis that caregivers' frequency and use of touches with speech change with infants' development. Results revealed that the frequency of word/utterance‐touch alignment as well as word + touch co‐occurrence is highest in speech addressed to the youngest group of infants. Thus, this study provides support for the hypothesis that caregivers' use of touch during dyadic interactions is sensitive to infants' age in a way similar to caregivers' use of speech alone and could provide cues useful to infants' language learning at critical points in early development.

Funder

Chosun University

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Developmental and Educational Psychology,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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