Authors
Claire Monroy, Chen Yu, Derek Houston
Publication date
2024/4/23
Journal
Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology
Pages
17470218241253277
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Description
Infants experience the world through their actions with objects and their interactions with other people, especially their parents. Prior research has shown that school-age children with hearing loss experience poorer quality interactions with typically hearing parents, yet little is known about parent–child interactions between toddlers with hearing loss and their parents early in life. In the current study, we used mobile eye-tracking to investigate parent–child interactions in toddlers with and without hearing loss (mean ages: 19.42 months, SD = 3.41 months). Parents and toddlers engaged in a goal-directed, interactive task that involved inserting coins into a slot and required joint coordination between the parent and the child. Overall, findings revealed that deaf toddlers demonstrate typical action skills in line with their hearing peers and engage in similar interactions with their parents during social interactions …
Scholar articles
C Monroy, C Yu, D Houston - Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 2024