1. Where language meets attention: How contingent interactions promote learning
- Author
-
Sarah J. Paterson, Lillian R. Masek, Brianna T. M. McMillan, Roberta Michnick Golinkoff, Kathy Hirsh-Pasek, and Catherine S. Tamis-LeMonda
- Subjects
education ,05 social sciences ,Parent-child interaction ,Foundation (evidence) ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Language acquisition ,050105 experimental psychology ,Education ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Language development ,InformationSystems_MODELSANDPRINCIPLES ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,Relation (history of concept) ,Communicative intent ,Reciprocal ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Contingent interactions between caregivers and infants, in which caregivers respond promptly and meaningfully to infants’ behaviors, lay a foundation for language learning. Three pathways have been proposed for how contingent interactions promote the development of language skills: temporal, semantic, and pragmatic. Here, we argue that these pathways act through a reciprocal relation between infant attention and contingent interactions. We present evidence that attention facilitates contingent interactions to help infants understand communicative intent and, in turn, contingent interactions promote attention to allow infants to better learn from the language directed to them. This new framework suggests that contingent interactions operate through domain-general skills, thereby establishing a foundation for learning more broadly.
- Published
- 2021