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How do maternal interaction style and joint attention relate to language development in infants with Down syndrome and typically developing infants?

•Responding to joint attention is positively related to concurrent language in infants with DS aged 17–23 months.•Maternal interactive style is positively related to language in TD infants of equivalent non-verbal mental age.•Different social communication factors concurrently predict language in TD...

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Published in:Research in developmental disabilities 2018-12, Vol.83, p.194-205
Main Authors: Seager, Emily, Mason-Apps, Emily, Stojanovik, Vesna, Norbury, Courtenay, Bozicevic, Laura, Murray, Lynne
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Language:English
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c400t-f4f3f401b14186a315fdd2f5986af97ea1250ffbeef4559f738b26619594155c3
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container_title Research in developmental disabilities
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creator Seager, Emily
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description •Responding to joint attention is positively related to concurrent language in infants with DS aged 17–23 months.•Maternal interactive style is positively related to language in TD infants of equivalent non-verbal mental age.•Different social communication factors concurrently predict language in TD infants and infants with DS. Down syndrome (DS) is more detrimental to language acquisition compared to other forms of learning disability. It has been shown that early social communication skills are important for language acquisition in the typical population; however few studies have examined the relationship between early social communication and language in DS. The aim of the current study is to compare the relationship between joint attention and concurrent language skills, and maternal interactive style and concurrent language skills in infants with DS and in typically developing (TD) infants matched for mental age. We also investigated if these relationships differ between children with DS and TD children. Twenty-five infants with DS (17–23 months) and 30 TD infants (9–11 months) were assessed on measures of joint attention, maternal interactive style and language. The results indicated a significant positive relationship between responding to joint attention (RJA) and concurrent language for the DS group, and a significant positive relationship between maternal positive expressed emotion (PEEM) and concurrent language for the TD group. We hypothesise that different social-communication factors are associated with language skills in DS, at least between 17 and 23 months of age compared to TD infants of similar non-verbal and general language abilities.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.ridd.2018.08.011
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subjects Adult
Attention
Correlation of Data
Down syndrome
Down Syndrome - psychology
Female
Humans
Infant
Interaction
Interpersonal Relations
Joint attention
Language
Language Development
Male
Maternal Behavior - psychology
Mother-Child Relations - psychology
Social Skills
Typically developing infants
title How do maternal interaction style and joint attention relate to language development in infants with Down syndrome and typically developing infants?
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