Gesture and speech in maternal input to children with Down's syndrome.
@article{Iverson2006GestureAS,
title={Gesture and speech in maternal input to children with Down's syndrome.},
author={Jana M. Iverson and Emiddia Longobardi and Katia Spampinato and Maria Cristina Caselli},
journal={International journal of language \& communication disorders},
year={2006},
volume={41 3},
pages={
235-51
}
}BACKGROUND
Despite recent interest in relationships between maternal gesture and speech and communicative development in typically developing (TD) children, little work has examined either speech or gesture in mothers of children with Down's syndrome (DS).
AIMS
To compare aspects of speech and gesture production by mothers of children with DS with that of mothers of TD children.
METHODS & PROCEDURES
Participants were five mothers of children with DS (mean chronological age (CA) = 47.6…
36 Citations
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Sequential analysis revealed that only in the SLI group maternal reading accompanied by gestures was significantly followed by child's initiatives, and when maternal non-informative repairs were accompany by gestures, they were more likely to elicit adequate answers from children.
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Maternal Gesture Use and Language Development in Infant Siblings of Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
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- 2015
Infant and maternal gesture use at 12 months was associated with infants’ language scores at 18 months in both low risk and non-diagnosed high risk infants, and the impact of risk status on maternal behavior is demonstrated.
Lexical development in children with Down syndrome: A communicative perspective
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The results of the present study show that the N-CDI is a valuable and valid measurement of expressive vocabulary in children with Down syndrome.
TiTlE Maternal teaching behaviour and preverbal development of children with Down syndrome and typically developing children
- Psychology, Medicine
- 2010
For children with Down syndrome and typically developing children, sequences of parental behaviour including Focusing accompanied by Affecting or Expanding, observed at 14-16 months, predicted pre-verbal development and Bayley scores, at 20-22 months, whereas ‘isolated’ Focusing behaviour was a negative predictor of the above.
Do Parents Model Gestures Differently When Children’s Gestures Differ?
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It is suggested that, even though parents model gestures similarly, the amount with which children produce each type largely reflects diagnosis-specific abilities.
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