Authors
Anne S Warlaumont, Jeffrey A Richards, Jill Gilkerson, D Kimbrough Oller
Publication date
2014/7
Journal
Psychological science
Volume
25
Issue
7
Pages
1314-1324
Publisher
Sage Publications
Description
We analyzed the microstructure of child-adult interaction during naturalistic, daylong, automatically labeled audio recordings (13,836 hr total) of children (8- to 48-month-olds) with and without autism. We found that an adult was more likely to respond when the child’s vocalization was speech related rather than not speech related. In turn, a child’s vocalization was more likely to be speech related if the child’s previous speech-related vocalization had received an immediate adult response rather than no response. Taken together, these results are consistent with the idea that there is a social feedback loop between child and caregiver that promotes speech development. Although this feedback loop applies in both typical development and autism, children with autism produced proportionally fewer speech-related vocalizations, and the responses they received were less contingent on whether their vocalizations were …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
AS Warlaumont, JA Richards, J Gilkerson, DK Oller - Psychological science, 2014