Effects of children’s hearing loss on the synchrony between parents’ object naming and children’s attention

Publication date: November 2019Source: Infant Behavior and Development, Volume 57Author(s): Chi-hsin Chen, Irina Castellanos, Chen Yu, Derek M. HoustonAbstractChildren’s attentional state during parent-child interactions is important for word learning. The current study examines the real-time attentional patterns of toddlers with and without hearing loss (N = 15, age range: 12–37 months) in parent-child interactions. High-density gaze data recorded from head-mounted eye-trackers were used to investigate the synchrony between parents’ naming of novel objects and children’s sustained attention on the named objects in joint play. Results show that the sheer quantities of parents’ naming and children’s sustained attention episodes were comparable in children with hearing loss and their peers with normal hearing. However, parents’ naming and children’s sustained attention episodes were less synchronized in the hearing loss group compared to children with normal hearing. Possible implications are discussed.
Source: Infant Behavior and Development - Category: Child Development Source Type: research