- 7 Surprising Ways to Make 2025 Healthy
- Alcohol Intake Increases Cancer Risk, Beverages Should Carry Warning: Surgeon General
- These Are Some of the Best Diets for 2025, Report Says
- AI Proves Useful for Ovarian Cancer Diagnosis
- Ready-to-Eat Broccoli Pulled from Walmart Shelves Due to Listeria Risk
- Some Brain Cells Change with Age, Some Don’t: Study
- More Activity, Less Risk: Tell Your MD How Much You Move
- Peer Pressure Influences Older Adult Alcohol Consumption
- Feeling Self-Conscious Is Linked to Teen Binge Drinking
- Why Does Cancer Spread to the Lungs So Often?
Try Talking More to Boost Your Toddler’s Vocabulary
THURSDAY, Oct. 31The more that adults talk to toddlers, the more quickly the children’s language skills develop, according to a small new study.
The study included 29 children, 19 months old, from low-income Hispanic families. Each child was fitted with a small audio recorder that captured all the sounds he or she heard during the day in their homes.
The recordings were analyzed to distinguish between adult speech directed at the toddlers and speech they only overheard, such as when a parent or other caregiver was on the phone or talking with another adult.
The researchers found large differences between families in the amount of child-directed speech that toddlers heard from adults. One child heard more than 12,000 words of child-directed speech in a day, while another heard only 670, according to the study released online recently in the journal Psychological Science.
“That’s just 67 words per hour, less speech than you’d hear in a 30-second commercial,” study co-author Anne Fernald, a psychology professor at Stanford University, said in a news release from the Association for Psychological Science.
The researchers conducted language skills tests of the children five months later. At age 24 months, those who had experienced more child-directed speech had larger vocabularies than those who heard less child-directed speech.
It’s known that children in poorer families generally have poorer language skills than those in wealthier families. These new findings help reveal why that’s the case and suggest ways to reduce that language gap.
More information
The American Academy of Pediatrics has more about language development.
Source: HealthDay
Copyright © 2025 HealthDay. All rights reserved.