Communicative and linguistic factors influencing language development at 30 months of age in preterm and full-term children: a longitudinal study using the CDI
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Frontiers Media
Abstract
Introduction: Previous studies showed that very preterm children have a delay
in communicative (gestures) and linguistic development as compared to fullterm
children. Earlier use of gestures, as well as of word comprehension and
production, have been found to be predictive of subsequent word production
and/or language delay in both very preterm and full-term children. Not many
studies on communicative antecedents of language, however, have been carried
out with low-risk preterm children in comparison to full-term children.
Methods: In the present study a sample (N = 142) of low-risk preterm children has
been followed using the Galician version of the Communicative Development
Inventories (CDI) at the ages of 10, 22, and 30 months of age and their results
were compared to the results from a sample (N = 49) of full-term children at the
same ages. The determinants of language measures (vocabulary and grammar) at
30 months of age have been studied through linear regression analyses.
Results: ANOVA results indicate that there were no significant differences
between the groups in any of the measures obtained with the CDI at any time, nor
were there any differences in lexical or grammatical developmental trajectories
between both groups (repeated measures ANOVA). Linear regression analyses
showed that the predictors of language at 30 months of age are somewhat
different for the full-term than for the preterm group.
Discussion: While the use of first communicative gestures at 10 months is a
predictor of word production at 30 months of age for the full-term group,
participation in games and routines seems to play a significant predictive role
for preterm children. Word production at 22 months is the factor with a major
incidence on word production at the age of 30 months for both groups. Previous
specific measures of grammatical development have a clear determinant role in
grammar measures at 30 months of age for the full-term children, while in the
case of preterm children previous lexical development seems to be more relevant
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Bibliographic citation
Ogneva A. and Pérez-Pereira M. (2023). Communicative and linguistic factors influencing language development at 30 months of age in preterm and full-term children: a longitudinal study using the CDI. Front. Psychol. 14:1177161
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https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1177161Sponsors
This research was funded by the Ministerio Economía Industria y Competitividad of the Spanish Government (Grants PSI2008-03905, PSI2011-23210, and PSI2015-66697-R to MP-P). Funds for open access publication fees were received from the Consellería de Educación, Universidade e Formación Profesional -Xunta de Galicia
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© 2023 Ogneva and Pérez-Pereira. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)








