4.5 Article

Conversation Initiation of Mothers, Fathers, and Toddlers in their Natural Home Environment

Journal

COMPUTER SPEECH AND LANGUAGE
Volume 73, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.csl.2021.101338

Keywords

Conversation initiation; Conversational dynamics; Daylong vocal analysis

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation, SBE-RIDIR [1539133, 1539129, 1539010]
  2. National Institutes of Health, NIDCD [R01DC009569, DC009560-01S1]
  3. WSU Seed Grant [124172-001]
  4. Washington Research Foundation
  5. Direct For Social, Behav & Economic Scie
  6. SBE Off Of Multidisciplinary Activities [1539010, 1539129, 1539133] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The study found that in family conversations, children initiate conversations more frequently than mothers, while mothers initiate more conversations than fathers. These results support developmental theories about the different and variable roles that interlocutors play in a social context.
In a conversational exchange, interlocutors use social cues including conversational turn-taking to communicate. There has been attention in the literature concerning how mothers, fathers, boys, and girls converse with each other, and in particular who initiates a conversation. Better understanding of conversational dynamics may deepen our understanding of social roles, speech and language development, and individual language variability. Here we use large-scale automatic analysis of 186 naturalistic daylong acoustic recordings to examine the conversational dynamics of 26 families with children about 30 months of age to better understand communication roles. Families included 15 with boys and 11 with girls. There was no difference in conversation initiation rate by child sex, but children initiated more conversations than mothers, and mothers initiated more than fathers. Results support developmental theories of the different and variable roles that interlocutors play in a social context.

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