Publication | Closed Access
Why Is Infant Language Learning Facilitated by Parental Responsiveness?
516
Citations
52
References
2014
Year
Language DevelopmentEarly Childhood LanguagePsycholinguisticsBilingual Language DevelopmentInfant Language LearningLanguage LearningSocial SciencesInfant WordCognitive LinguisticsChild LanguageLanguage AcquisitionCognitive DevelopmentLanguage StudiesVerbal InteractionDiverse Cultural CommunitiesCognitive ScienceInfant CognitionChild DevelopmentSpeech DevelopmentInfant DevelopmentLanguage ScienceLinguistics
Parents’ responsiveness to infants’ exploratory and communicative behaviors predicts infant word learning during early periods of language development. The study examines the processes that might explain why responsiveness predicts word learning and considers the generalizability of these processes to infants from diverse cultural communities. Responsiveness supports infants’ growing pragmatic understanding that language is a tool for sharing intentions and, through its temporal contiguity, contingency, multimodal and didactic content, facilitates mapping words to referents, thereby promoting vocabulary growth.
Parents’ responsiveness to infants’ exploratory and communicative behaviors predicts infant word learning during early periods of language development. We examine the processes that might explain why this association exists. We suggest that responsiveness supports infants’ growing pragmatic understanding that language is a tool that enables intentions to be socially shared. Additionally, several features of responsiveness—namely, its temporal contiguity, contingency, and multimodal and didactic content—facilitate infants’ mapping of words to their referents and, in turn, growth in vocabulary. We close by examining the generalizability of these processes to infants from diverse cultural communities.
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