Bergelson, Amatuni, Dailey, Koorathota, Tor
Measurements
of infants’ quotidian experiences provide critical information about early
development. However, the role of sampling methods in providing these
measurements is rarely examined. Here we directly compare language input from
hour-long video-recordings and daylong audio-recordings within the same group
of 44 infants at 6 and 7 months. We compared 12 measures of language quantity
and lexical diversity, talker variability, utterance-type, and object
presence, finding moderate correlations across recording-types. However,
video-recordings generally featured far denser noun input across these
measures compared to the daylong audio-recordings, more akin to ‘peak’ audio
hours (though not as high in talkers and word-types). Although
audio-recordings captured ~10 times more awake-time than videos, the noun
input in them was only 2–4 times greater. Notably, whether we compared videos
to daylong audio-recordings or peak audio times, videos featured relatively
fewer declaratives and more questions; furthermore, the most common
video-recorded nouns were less consistent across families than the top
audio-recording nouns were. Thus, hour-long videos and daylong
audio-recordings revealed fairly divergent pictures of the language infants
hear and learn from in their daily lives. We suggest that short
video-recordings provide a dense and somewhat different sample of infants’
language experiences, rather than a typical one, and should be used
cautiously for extrapolation about common words, talkers, utterance-types,
and contexts at larger timescales. If theories of language development are to
be held accountable to ‘facts on the ground’ from observational data, greater
care is needed to unpack the ramifications of sampling methods of early
language input.