Caregiver speech predicts the emergence of children's emotion vocabulary.


Journal

Child development
ISSN: 1467-8624
Titre abrégé: Child Dev
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 0372725

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
05 2023
Historique:
pmc-release: 01 05 2024
medline: 21 4 2023
pubmed: 1 3 2023
entrez: 28 2 2023
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Learning about emotions is an important part of children's social and communicative development. How does children's emotion-related vocabulary emerge over development? How may emotion-related information in caregiver input support learning of emotion labels and other emotion-related words? This investigation examined language production and input among English-speaking toddlers (16-30 months) using two datasets: Wordbank (N = 5520; 36% female, 38% male, and 26% unknown gender; 1% Asian, 4% Black, 2% Hispanic, 40% White, 2% others, and 50% unknown ethnicity; collected in North America; dates of data collection unknown) and Child Language Data Exchange System (N = 587; 46% female, 44% male, 9% unknown gender, all unknown ethnicity; collected in North America and the UK; data collection dates, were available between 1962 and 2009). First, we show that toddlers develop the vocabulary to express increasingly wide ranges of emotional information during the first 2 years of life. Computational measures of word valence showed that emotion labels are embedded in a rich network of words with related valence. Second, we show that caregivers leverage these semantic connections in ways that may scaffold children's learning of emotion and mental state labels. This research suggests that young children use the dynamics of language input to construct emotion word meanings, and provides new techniques for defining the quality of infant-directed speech.

Identifiants

pubmed: 36852506
doi: 10.1111/cdev.13897
pmc: PMC10121903
mid: NIHMS1876986
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

585-602

Subventions

Organisme : NICHD NIH HHS
ID : R01 HD095912
Pays : United States
Organisme : NIMH NIH HHS
ID : R01 MH114904
Pays : United States

Informations de copyright

© 2023 The Authors. Child Development © 2023 Society for Research in Child Development.

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Auteurs

Mira L Nencheva (ML)

Department of Psychology, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey, USA.

Diana I Tamir (DI)

Department of Psychology, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey, USA.

Casey Lew-Williams (C)

Department of Psychology, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey, USA.

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Classifications MeSH