Publication: Learning words by hand: Gesture's role in predicting vocabulary development
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Date
2008
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Rowe, M. L., S. Ozcaliskan, and S. Goldin-Meadow. 2008. “Learning Words by Hand: Gesture’s Role in Predicting Vocabulary Development.” First Language 28 (2): 182–199.
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Abstract
Children vary widely in how quickly their vocabularies grow. Can looking at
early gesture use in children and parents help us predict this variability? We
videotaped 53 English-speaking parent-child dyads in their homes during
their daily activities for 90-minutes every four months between child age 14
and 34 months. At 42 months, children were given the Peabody Picture
Vocabulary Test (PPVT). We found that child gesture use at 14 months was a
significant predictor of vocabulary size at 42 months, above and beyond the
effects of parent and child word use at 14 months. Parent gesture use at 14
months was not directly related to vocabulary development, but did
relate to child gesture use at 14 months which, in turn, predicted
child vocabulary. These relations hold even when background factors such
as socio-economic status are controlled. The findings underscore the
importance of examining early gesture when predicting child vocabulary
development.
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