4.5 Article

Neuroplasticity associated with changes in conversational turn-taking following a family-based intervention

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 49, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.dcn.2021.100967

Keywords

Neuroplasticity; Conversational turns; Socioeconomic status; Family-Based intervention; Language development; LENA

Funding

  1. Walton Family Foundation
  2. Eunice Kennedy Schriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development [F31HD086957]
  3. Harvard Mind Brain Behavior Grant

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This study investigates the relationship between children's early language environments and neurodevelopment, finding that family-based intervention can increase conversational turns between adults and children, enhance language and executive functioning, promote cortical thickening, and support children's language development.
Children's early language environments are associated with linguistic, cognitive, and academic development, as well as concurrent brain structure and function. This study investigated neurodevelopmental mechanisms linking language input to development by measuring neuroplasticity associated with an intervention designed to enhance language environments of families primarily from lower socioeconomic backgrounds. Families of 52 4to-6 year-old children were randomly assigned to a 9-week, interactive, family-based intervention or no-contact control group. Children completed pre- and post-assessments of verbal and nonverbal cognition (n = 52), structural magnetic resonance imaging (n = 45), and home auditory recordings of language exposure (n = 39). Families who completed the intervention exhibited greater increases in adult-child conversational turns, and changes in turn-taking mediated intervention effects on language and executive functioning measures. Collapsing across groups, turn-taking changes were also positively correlated with cortical thickening in left inferior frontal and supramarginal gyri, the latter of which mediated relationships between changes in turn-taking and children's language development. This is the first study of longitudinal neuroplasticity in response to changes in children's language environments, and findings suggest that conversational turns support language development through cortical growth in language and social processing regions. This has implications for early interventions to enhance children's language environments to support neurocognitive development.

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