학술논문

Naturalistic Language Recordings Reveal 'Hypervocal' Infants at High Familial Risk for Autism
Document Type
Journal Articles
Reports - Research
Source
Child Development. Mar-Apr 2018 89(2):60-73.
Subject
Infants
Autism
Pervasive Developmental Disorders
Environmental Influences
Child Development
Genetics
Language Acquisition
Siblings
Children
Delayed Speech
Risk
Child Language
Oral Language
Interpersonal Communication
Medical Evaluation
Language
English
ISSN
0009-3920
Abstract
Children's early language environments are related to later development. Little is known about this association in siblings of children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), who often experience language delays or have ASD. Fifty-nine 9-month-old infants at high or low familial risk for ASD contributed full-day in-home language recordings. High-risk infants produced more vocalizations than low-risk peers; conversational turns and adult words did not differ by group. Vocalization differences were driven by a subgroup of "hypervocal" infants. Despite more vocalizations overall, these infants engaged in less social babbling during a standardized clinic assessment, and they experienced fewer conversational turns relative to their rate of vocalizations. Two ways in which these individual and environmental differences may relate to subsequent development are discussed.