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Beyond the “30 Million Word Gap:” Children’s Conversational Exposure is Associated with Language-Related Brain Function

Harvard Dataverse (Africa Rice Center, Bioversity International, CCAFS, CIAT, IFPRI, IRRI and WorldFish)

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Title Beyond the “30 Million Word Gap:” Children’s Conversational Exposure is Associated with Language-Related Brain Function
 
Identifier https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/DIDBMQ
 
Creator Romeo, Rachel
 
Publisher Harvard Dataverse
 
Description Children’s early language exposure impacts their later linguistic skills, cognitive abilities, and academic achievement, and large disparities in language exposure are associated with family socioeconomic status (SES). However, there is little evidence about the neural mechanism(s) underlying the relation between language experience and linguistic/cognitive development. Here, language experience was measured from home audio recordings of 36 SES-diverse 4-6 year-old children. During a story-listening fMRI task, children who had experienced more conversational turns with adults—independent of SES, IQ, and adult/child utterances alone—exhibited greater left inferior frontal (Broca’s area) activation, which significantly explained the relation between children’s language exposure and verbal skill. This is the first evidence directly relating children’s language environments with neural language processing, specifying both environmental and neural mechanisms underlying SES disparities in children’s language skills. Furthermore, results suggest that conversational experience impacts neural language processing over and above SES and/or the sheer quantity of words heard.
 
Subject Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
Social Sciences
 
Contributor Romeo, Rachel