Literature DB >> 23217292

Gesturing with an injured brain: how gesture helps children with early brain injury learn linguistic constructions.

Seyda Ozçalişkan1, Susan C Levine, Susan Goldin-Meadow.   

Abstract

Children with pre/perinatal unilateral brain lesions (PL) show remarkable plasticity for language development. Is this plasticity characterized by the same developmental trajectory that characterizes typically developing (TD) children, with gesture leading the way into speech? We explored this question, comparing eleven children with PL - matched to thirty TD children on expressive vocabulary - in the second year of life. Children with PL showed similarities to TD children for simple but not complex sentence types. Children with PL produced simple sentences across gesture and speech several months before producing them entirely in speech, exhibiting parallel delays in both gesture + speech and speech-alone. However, unlike TD children, children with PL produced complex sentence types first in speech-alone. Overall, the gesture-speech system appears to be a robust feature of language learning for simple - but not complex - sentence constructions, acting as a harbinger of change in language development even when that language is developing in an injured brain.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23217292      PMCID: PMC3655410          DOI: 10.1017/S0305000912000220

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Child Lang        ISSN: 0305-0009


  40 in total

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Authors:  Susan Goldin-Meadow; Sian L Beilock
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Authors:  Susan Wagner Cook; Zachary Mitchell; Susan Goldin-Meadow
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  9 in total

1.  Narrative processing in typically developing children and children with early unilateral brain injury: seeing gesture matters.

Authors:  Özlem Ece Demir; Joan A Fisher; Susan Goldin-Meadow; Susan C Levine
Journal:  Dev Psychol       Date:  2013-10-14

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Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2014-09-19       Impact factor: 6.237

3.  The origins of higher-order thinking lie in children's spontaneous talk across the pre-school years.

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Journal:  Child Dev Perspect       Date:  2009-08-01

5.  Sex differences in language first appear in gesture.

Authors:  Seyda Ozçalişkan; Susan Goldin-Meadow
Journal:  Dev Sci       Date:  2010-09-01

6.  When gesture-speech combinations do and do not index linguistic change.

Authors:  Seyda Ozçalışkan; Susan Goldin-Meadow
Journal:  Lang Cogn Process       Date:  2009-02-01

7.  A tale of two hands: children's early gesture use in narrative production predicts later narrative structure in speech.

Authors:  Özlem Ece Demir; Susan C Levine; Susan Goldin-Meadow
Journal:  J Child Lang       Date:  2014-08-04

8.  Gesture as a window onto communicative abilities: Implications for diagnosis and intervention.

Authors:  Susan Goldin-Meadow
Journal:  Perspect Lang Learn Educ       Date:  2015-03

9.  Early deictic but not other gestures predict later vocabulary in both typical development and autism.

Authors:  Şeyda Özçalışkan; Lauren B Adamson; Nevena Dimitrova
Journal:  Autism       Date:  2015-10-26
  9 in total

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