Naturalistic parent-child reading frequency and language development in toddlers with and without autism.

IF 2.5 Q1 EDUCATION, SPECIAL
Autism and Developmental Language Impairments Pub Date : 2022-11-10 eCollection Date: 2022-01-01 DOI:10.1177/23969415221136740
Janine Mathée-Scott, Susan Ellis Weismer
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background and aims: The efficacy of parent-child reading for supporting language development has been well-established in the neurotypical (NT) literature. For children with autism spectrum disorder, (ASD) who may be at risk for delays in language development, prior research has shown promise for shared book-reading interventions. Yet there has been limited research on naturalistic parent-child reading with autistic children to date. The present study aimed to fill this missing link in the current literature.

Methods: Fifty-seven autistic toddlers participated at two developmental time points: Time 1 (Mage = 30.4 months) and Time 2 (Mage = 43.8 months). An NT control group (N = 31) was matched on age to a subset of the ASD group (N = 33). We assessed group differences in parent-child reading frequency between age-matched NT and autistic groups. Using a one-year follow-up design, we evaluated the relationship between parent-child reading and autistic children's language development.

Results: Cross-group comparisons revealed that parents of age-matched NT children reported significantly more frequent weekly parent-child reading than parents of autistic toddlers. After a one-year follow-up with the autistic group, within-group analyses revealed that greater frequency of parent-child reading (controlling for maternal education, books in the home, and autism symptom severity) was associated with larger growth in autistic toddlers' receptive and expressive language skills.

Conclusions and implications: These findings have important clinical implications as they emphasize the potential of parent-child reading for supporting autistic children's language development. Findings demonstrate that frequency of parent-child reading is associated with language development over one year. Findings also demonstrate that parents of autistic children engage in less frequent parent-child reading than parents of age-matched NT peers, suggesting these parents may face more barriers to implementing parent-child reading than parents of NT children.

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有和没有自闭症的幼儿自然亲子阅读频率与语言发展。
背景和目的:亲子阅读对语言发展的支持作用已在神经典型(NT)文献中得到证实。对于患有自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)的儿童来说,他们可能有语言发育迟缓的风险,先前的研究表明,共享阅读干预是有希望的。然而,迄今为止,关于自闭症儿童自然亲子阅读的研究还很有限。本研究旨在填补当前文献中缺失的这一环节。方法:57名自闭症幼儿在时间1(年龄30.4个月)和时间2(年龄43.8个月)两个发展时间点参与研究。NT对照组(N = 31)与ASD组的一个子集(N = 33)在年龄上匹配。我们评估了年龄匹配的NT和自闭症组之间亲子阅读频率的组间差异。采用为期一年的随访设计,我们评估亲子阅读与自闭症儿童语言发展之间的关系。结果:跨组比较显示,年龄匹配的自闭症儿童的父母比自闭症幼儿的父母报告的每周亲子阅读频率明显更高。在对自闭症组进行了一年的随访后,组内分析显示,亲子阅读的频率越高(控制了母亲的教育、家里的书和自闭症症状的严重程度),自闭症幼儿的接受和表达语言技能的增长就越大。结论和意义:这些发现具有重要的临床意义,因为它们强调了亲子阅读对支持自闭症儿童语言发展的潜力。研究结果表明,在一年的时间里,亲子阅读的频率与语言发展有关。研究结果还表明,自闭症儿童的父母参与亲子阅读的频率低于年龄匹配的NT儿童的父母,这表明这些父母在实施亲子阅读时可能比NT儿童的父母面临更多的障碍。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Autism and Developmental Language Impairments
Autism and Developmental Language Impairments Psychology-Clinical Psychology
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
20
审稿时长
12 weeks
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