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      Where language meets attention: How contingent interactions promote learning

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          Imitation of facial and manual gestures by human neonates.

          Infants between 12 and 21 days of age can imitate both facial and manual gestures; this behavior cannot be explained in terms of either conditioning or innate releasing mechanisms. Such imitation implies that human neonates can equate their own unseen behaviors with gestures they see others perform.
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            Joint attention and early language.

            This paper reports 2 studies that explore the role of joint attentional processes in the child's acquisition of language. In the first study, 24 children were videotaped at 15 and 21 months of age in naturalistic interaction with their mothers. Episodes of joint attentional focus between mother and child--for example, joint play with an object--were identified. Inside, as opposed to outside, these episodes both mothers and children produced more utterances, mothers used shorter sentences and more comments, and dyads engaged in longer conversations. Inside joint episodes maternal references to objects that were already the child's focus of attention were positively correlated with the child's vocabulary at 21 months, while object references that attempted to redirect the child's attention were negatively correlated. No measures from outside these episodes related to child language. In an experimental study, an adult attempted to teach novel words to 10 17-month-old children. Words referring to objects on which the child's attention was already focused were learned better than words presented in an attempt to redirect the child's attentional focus.
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              The origins of intelligence in children.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Developmental Review
                Developmental Review
                Elsevier BV
                02732297
                June 2021
                June 2021
                : 60
                : 100961
                Article
                10.1016/j.dr.2021.100961
                86055b37-a498-4977-b996-73fd3b3d1e55
                © 2021

                https://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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