Literature DB >> 21434972

Profiles of language development in pre-school children: a longitudinal latent class analysis of data from the Early Language in Victoria Study.

O C Ukoumunne1, M Wake, J Carlin, E L Bavin, J Lum, J Skeat, J Williams, L Conway, E Cini, S Reilly.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Pre-school language impairment is common and greatly reduces educational performance. Population attempts to identify children who would benefit from appropriately timed intervention might be improved by greater knowledge about the typical profiles of language development. Specifically, this could be used to help with the early identification of children who will be impaired on school entry.
METHODS: This study applied longitudinal latent class analysis to assessments at 8, 12, 24, 36 and 48 months on 1113 children from a population-based study, in order to identify classes exhibiting distinct communicative developmental profiles.
RESULTS: Five substantive classes were identified: Typical, i.e. development in the typical range at each age; Precocious (late), i.e. typical development in infancy followed by high probabilities of precocity from 24 months onwards; Impaired (early), i.e. high probabilities of impairment up to 12 months followed by typical language development thereafter; Impaired (late), i.e. typical development in infancy but impairment from 24 months onwards; Precocious (early), i.e. high probabilities of precocity in early life followed by typical language by 48 months. The entropy statistic (0.84) suggested classes were fairly well defined, although there was a non-trivial degree of uncertainty in classification of children. That half of the Impaired (late) class was expected to have typical language at 4 years and 6% of the numerically large Typical class was expected to be impaired at 4 years illustrates this. Characteristics indicative of social advantage were more commonly found in the classes with improving profiles.
CONCLUSIONS: Developmental profiles show that some pre-schoolers' language is characterized by periods of accelerated development, slow development and catch-up growth. Given the uncertainty in classifying children into these profiles, use of this knowledge for identifying children who will be impaired on school entry is not straightforward. The findings do, however, indicate greater need for language enrichment programmes among disadvantaged children.
© 2011 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21434972     DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2214.2011.01234.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Child Care Health Dev        ISSN: 0305-1862            Impact factor:   2.508


  14 in total

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Review 2.  Specific language impairment: a convenient label for whom?

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4.  The Agreement between Parent-Reported and Directly Measured Child Language and Parenting Behaviors.

Authors:  Shannon K Bennetts; Fiona K Mensah; Elizabeth M Westrupp; Naomi J Hackworth; Sheena Reilly
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2016-11-11

Review 5.  What Factors Influence Language Impairment? Considering Resilience as well as Risk.

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6.  Association of late-onset postpartum depression of mothers with expressive language development during infancy and early childhood: the HBC study.

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7.  Preschool Communication: Early Identification of Concerns About Preschool Language Development and Social Participation.

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Journal:  Front Public Health       Date:  2021-01-22

8.  Levers for Language Growth: Characteristics and Predictors of Language Trajectories between 4 and 7 Years.

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Review 9.  Neural Correlates of Developmental Speech and Language Disorders: Evidence from Neuroimaging.

Authors:  Frédérique Liégeois; Angela Mayes; Angela Morgan
Journal:  Curr Dev Disord Rep       Date:  2014-06-07

10.  Early life cognitive development trajectories and intelligence quotient in middle childhood and early adolescence in rural western China.

Authors:  Zhonghai Zhu; Suying Chang; Yue Cheng; Qi Qi; Shaoru Li; Mohamed Elhoumed; Hong Yan; Michael J Dibley; Wafaie W Fawzi; Lingxia Zeng; Christopher R Sudfeld
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2019-12-04       Impact factor: 4.379

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