操作化
社会经济地位
发展心理学
心理学
语言发展
自给农业
语言习得
集合(抽象数据类型)
多语种
地理
人口学
社会学
人口
计算机科学
农业
数学教育
考古
哲学
程序设计语言
认识论
教育学
作者
Elika Bergelson,Mélanie Söderström,Iris-Corinna Schwarz,Caroline F. Rowland,Nairán Ramírez-Esparza,Lisa Hamrick,Ellen Marklund,Marina Kalashnikova,Ava Guez,Marisa Casillas,Lucia Benetti,Petra van Alphen,Alejandrina Cristià
标识
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2300671120
摘要
Language is a universal human ability, acquired readily by young children, who otherwise struggle with many basics of survival. And yet, language ability is variable across individuals. Naturalistic and experimental observations suggest that children’s linguistic skills vary with factors like socioeconomic status and children’s gender. But which factors really influence children’s day-to-day language use? Here, we leverage speech technology in a big-data approach to report on a unique cross-cultural and diverse data set: >2,500 d-long, child-centered audio-recordings of 1,001 2- to 48-mo-olds from 12 countries spanning six continents across urban, farmer-forager, and subsistence-farming contexts. As expected, age and language-relevant clinical risks and diagnoses predicted how much speech (and speech-like vocalization) children produced. Critically, so too did adult talk in children’s environments: Children who heard more talk from adults produced more speech. In contrast to previous conclusions based on more limited sampling methods and a different set of language proxies, socioeconomic status (operationalized as maternal education) was not significantly associated with children’s productions over the first 4 y of life, and neither were gender or multilingualism. These findings from large-scale naturalistic data advance our understanding of which factors are robust predictors of variability in the speech behaviors of young learners in a wide range of everyday contexts.
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