Naming with words and gestures in children with Down Syndrome
Several researchers have shown a close relationship between
gesture and language in typically developing children and in
children with developmental disorders involving delayed or
impaired linguistic abilities. Most of these studies reported
that, when children are limited in cognitive, linguistic, met-
alinguistic, and articulatory skills, they may compensate for
some of these limitations with gestures (Capone & McGre-
gor, 2004). Some researchers also highlighted that children
with Down Syndrome (DS) show a preference for nonver-
bal communication using more gestures with respect to typi-
cally developing (TD) children (Stefanini, Caselli & Volterra,
2011). The present study investigates the lexical comprehen-
sion and production abilities as well as the frequency and the
form of gestural production in children with DS. In partic-
ular, we are interested in the frequency of gesture produc-
tion (deictic and representational) and the types of represen-
tational gesture produced. Four gesture types were coded,
including own body, size and shape, body-part-as object and
imagined-object. Fourteen children with DS (34 months of
developmental age, 54 months of chronological age) and a
comparison group of 14 typically developing children (TD)
(29 months of chronological age) matched for gender and de-
velopmental age were assessed through the parent question-
naire MB-CDI and a direct test of lexical comprehension and
production (PiNG). Children with DS show a general weak-
ness in lexical comprehension and production. As for the
composition of the lexical repertoire, for both groups of chil-
dren, nouns are understood and produced in higher percent-
ages compared to predicates. Children with DS produce more
representational gestures than TD children in the comprehen-
sion task and above all with predicates; on the contrary, both
groups of children exhibit the same number of gestures on the
MB-CDI and in the lexical production task. Children with
DS produced more unimodal gestural answers than the con-
trol group. Children from both groups produced all four ges-
ture types (own body 53%, size and shape 9%, body-part-as
object 25 %, and imagined-object 14%). Chi-square analy-
sis revealed no significant difference in the type of gesture
produced between the two groups of children for both lex-
ical categories. For both groups the distribution of gesture
types reflects an item effect (eg. 100% of gesture produced
for the pictures lion, kissing and washing were own body and
100% of the pictures produce for small and long were size and
shape). For some item (e.g. comb, talking on the phone) chil-
dren in both groups produced both types (body-part-as object
and imagined-object) with similar frequency. These data on
the types of representational gestures produced by the two
groups show a similar conceptual representation in TD chil-
dren and in children with DS despite a greater impairment of
the spoken linguistic abilities in the letter. Future investiga-
tions, are needed to confirm these preliminary results.
Publication type
PosterPublication date
2014
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