Quantity of parental language in the home environments of hard-of-hearing 2-year-olds
VanDam, Ambrose , Moeller
Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education
Automated
analyses of full-day recordings were used to determine whether young children
who are hard-of-hearing (HH) received similar levels of exposure to adult
words and conversational interactions as age-matched peers with
normal-hearing (NH). Differences in adult input between children in this
study and in a normative database were considered. Finally, factors were
examined that may have contributed to individual differences in the input
characteristics of families. Results indicated that the NH and HH groups were
exposed to similar numbers of adult words and conversational turns. However,
both the NH and HH groups were exposed to more adult words and engaged in
more conversational turns than the NH children in the normative sample.
Considering only the HH group, both quantity of adult words and
conversational exchanges were correlated with children’s auditory
characteristics. Children’s receptive language ability was correlated with
conversational exchanges but not with adult word counts.