Transitions to Early Communication in Children with Perinatal Brain Lesions

The available research concerning early communication development has thus far placed a large emphasis on language development, whereas the period of prelinguistic communication has been systematically neglected. The aim of this research was thus to analyse features of intentional prelinguistic comm...

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Veröffentlicht in:Hrvatska revija za rehabilitacijska istraživanja 2009-01, Vol.45 (1), p.15-29
Hauptverfasser: Ljubesic, Marta, Cepanec, Maja, Pavlisa, Jasmina Ivsac, Simlesa, Sanja
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container_start_page 15
container_title Hrvatska revija za rehabilitacijska istraživanja
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creator Ljubesic, Marta
Cepanec, Maja
Pavlisa, Jasmina Ivsac
Simlesa, Sanja
description The available research concerning early communication development has thus far placed a large emphasis on language development, whereas the period of prelinguistic communication has been systematically neglected. The aim of this research was thus to analyse features of intentional prelinguistic communication in children with perinatal brain lesions (clinical group) compared with children without neurodevolopmental risk factors in approximately the same communication development phase (6 months before achieving an expressive vocabulary over 50 words). The research is part of the longitudinal study "Cognitive & linguistic development in children at neurodevelopmnental risk." The participants were 21 children: 11 children with pre/perinatal brain lesions & typical cognitive development, 5 children with perinatal brain lesions & delayed cognitive development, & 5 children without any known neurodevelopment risk factors. Children were assessed on variables including mental age, language comprehension, language expression, communicative functions, & communicative forms. The results showed that the three groups had the same communication development phase at different chronological ages which were preceded by a similar level of language comprehension. Furthermore, those in the clinical groups in comparison to the control group communicated in simpler forms & exhibited fewer communicative functions. The results indicate the need to change the focus of future research to include attention to prelinguistic development. Adapted from the source document
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source DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals
subjects Brain Damage
Children
Communication
Intentionality
Language Acquisition
Longitudinal Studies
Neurolinguistics
title Transitions to Early Communication in Children with Perinatal Brain Lesions
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