Interaction Behaviors of Bilingual Parents With Their Young Children With Autism Spectrum Disorder

被引:15
作者
Hudry, Kristelle [1 ,2 ]
Rumney, Lisa [2 ]
Pitt, Nicole [2 ]
Barbaro, Josephine [2 ]
Vivanti, Giacomo [3 ]
机构
[1] La Trobe Univ, Victorian Autism Specif Early Learning & Care Ctr, Bundoora, Vic, Australia
[2] La Trobe Univ, Olga Tennison Autism Res Ctr, Sch Psychol & Publ Hlth, Bundoora, Vic, Australia
[3] Drexel Univ, AJ Drexel Autism Inst, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
关键词
VERBAL RESPONSIVENESS; LANGUAGE; PRESCHOOLERS; PERSPECTIVES; PREDICT;
D O I
10.1080/15374416.2017.1286592
中图分类号
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号
040203 ;
摘要
Given concerns that bilingual exposure might confuse children with disabilitiesincluding autism spectrum disorder (ASD)bilingual parents may restrict exposure to one language, often the community-dominant language. We investigated a potential consequence of this decision; the possibility that non-native language use might influence parental communicative behaviors during interaction with the child. We recruited 39 parent-child dyads, each with a young child with ASD (mostly boys) and parent/carer (mostly mothers). Parents were either monolingual speakers of community-dominant English (n = 20) or bilingual with English as the second language (n = 19). We confirmed our assumption that the latter group would have significantly poorer non-native English language via standardized assessment of expressive vocabulary, and ensured children were matched on age, ASD symptoms, and developmental level. We sampled parent-child interactionincluding in each of bilinguals' native and non-native languagesand coded parents' amount and complexity of speech, communicative synchrony, and imitations and expansions of their child's speech. Few differences presented across bilingual parents' native versus non-native language samples, but this group showed reduced synchrony and use of expansions compared to monolinguals. Further, bilinguals' English-language knowledge was associated with self-reported comfort using this language and with two coded interaction measures. These empirical data only partially support qualitative accounts that non-native language use may influence bilingual parents' interaction behaviors with their young children. With growing rates of ASD diagnosis and increasing cultural/linguistic diversity around the world, further dedicated clinical and experimental attention to this issue is clearly warranted.
引用
收藏
页码:S321 / S328
页数:8
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