Point, walk, talk: Links between three early milestones, from observation and parental report.

dc.contributor.author

Moore, Charlotte

dc.contributor.author

Dailey, Shannon

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Garrison, Hallie

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Amatuni, Andrei

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Bergelson, Elika

dc.date.accessioned

2020-01-01T18:48:06Z

dc.date.available

2020-01-01T18:48:06Z

dc.date.issued

2019-08

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2020-01-01T18:48:04Z

dc.description.abstract

Around their first birthdays, infants begin to point, walk, and talk. These abilities are appreciable both by researchers with strictly standardized criteria and caregivers with more relaxed notions of what each of these skills entails. Here, we compare the onsets of these skills and links among them across two data collection methods: observation and parental report. We examine pointing, walking, and talking in a sample of 44 infants studied longitudinally from 6 to 18 months. In this sample, links between pointing and vocabulary were tighter than those between walking and vocabulary, supporting a unified sociocommunicative growth account. Indeed, across several cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses, pointers had larger vocabularies than their nonpointing peers. In contrast to previous work, this did not hold for walkers' versus crawlers' vocabularies in our sample. Comparing across data sources, we find that reported and observed estimates of the growing vocabulary and of age of walk onset were closely correlated, while agreement between parents and researchers on pointing onset and talking onset was weaker. Taken together, these results support a developmental account in which gesture and language are intertwined aspects of early communication and symbolic thinking, whereas the shift from crawling to walking appears indistinct from age in its relation with language. We conclude that pointing, walking, and talking are on similar timelines yet distinct from one another, and discuss methodological and theoretical implications in the context of early development. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).

dc.identifier

2019-26875-001

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0012-1649

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1939-0599

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/19712

dc.language

eng

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American Psychological Association (APA)

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Developmental psychology

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10.1037/dev0000738

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Social Sciences

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Psychology, Developmental

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Psychology

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motor development

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pointing

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language acquisition

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infancy

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early milestones

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LANGUAGE

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INFANTS

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CHILDREN

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TRANSITION

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GESTURES

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HANDS

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WORD

dc.title

Point, walk, talk: Links between three early milestones, from observation and parental report.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Dailey, Shannon|0000-0002-0500-0371

duke.contributor.orcid

Bergelson, Elika|0000-0003-2742-4797

pubs.begin-page

1579

pubs.end-page

1593

pubs.issue

8

pubs.organisational-group

Trinity College of Arts & Sciences

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Duke

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Psychology and Neuroscience

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Linguistics

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Duke Institute for Brain Sciences

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University Institutes and Centers

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Institutes and Provost's Academic Units

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Surgery, Head and Neck Surgery and Communication Sciences

pubs.organisational-group

Surgery

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Clinical Science Departments

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School of Medicine

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

55

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