Huber, Ramírez, Corrigan, Kuhl
Interventions
focused on the home language environment have been shown to improve a number
of child language outcomes in the first years of life. However, data on the
longer-term effects of the intervention are still somewhat limited. The
current study examines child vocabulary and complex speech outcomes (N = 59)
during the year following completion of a parent-coaching intervention, which
was previously found to increase the quantity of parent-child conversational
turns and to improve child language outcomes through 18 months of age.
Measures of parental language input, child speech output, and parent-child
conversational turn-taking were manually coded from naturalistic home
recordings (Language Environment Analysis System, LENA) at regular 4-month intervals
when children were 6- to 24-months old. Child language skills were assessed
using the MacArthur–Bates Communicative Development Inventory (CDI) at four
time-points following the final intervention session (at 18, 24, 27, and 30
months). Vocabulary size and growth from 18 to 30 months was greater in the
intervention group, even after accounting for differences in child language
ability during the intervention period. The intervention group also scored
higher on measures of speech length and grammatical complexity, and these
effects were mediated by 18-month vocabulary. Intervention was associated
with increased parent-child conversational turn-taking in home recordings at
14 months, and mediation analysis suggested that 14-month conversational
turn-taking accounted for intervention-related differences in subsequent
vocabulary. Together, the results suggest enduring, positive effects of
parental language intervention and underscore the importance of interactive,
conversational language experience during the first 2 years of life.