Ramírez, Weiss, Sheth, Kuhl
Parental
input is considered a key predictor of language achievement during the first
years of life, yet relatively few studies have assessed its effects on
longer-term outcomes. We assess the effects of parental quantity of speech,
use of parentese (the acoustically exaggerated, clear, and higher-pitched
speech), and turn-taking in infancy, on child language at 5 years. Using a
longitudinal dataset of daylong LENA recordings collected with the same group
of English-speaking infants (N=44) at 6, 10, 14, 18, 24 months and then again
at 5 years, we demonstrate that parents’ consistent (defined as stable and
high) use of parentese in infancy was a potent predictor of lexical
diversity, mean length of utterance, and frequency of conversational
turn-taking between children and adults at Kindergarten entry. Together,
these findings highlight the potential importance of a high-quality language
learning environment in infancy for success at the start of formal schooling.