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Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Vol.27 387-396 September 1984.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Role of Mothers' Expansions in Stimulating Children's Language Production

Nancy J. Scherer 1
Lesley B. Olswang 2

1 Providence Speech and Hearing Center, Orange, CA
2 University of Washington, Seattle

Mothers' expansions were examined for their role in structuring conversational contributions and facilitating spontaneous imitations and productions of two-term semantic relations not previously used by their children. The subjects were four 2-year-old boys in late Stage 1 of linguistic development and their mothers. The investigation consisted of two studies. Study 1, a descriptive analysis of mother-child conversation, showed a contingent relationship between mothers' expansions and their children's use of spontaneous imitations. Study 2, an experimental procedure using a multiple baseline treatment design, showed that an increase in the mothers' expansions was systematically related to an increase in the children's initial spontaneous imitations of two-term semantic relations. Results also indicated that following the increase in spontaneous imitations, spontaneous productions of the two-term relations increased and were maintained, whereas spontaneous imitations subsequently decreased.

Submitted on April 4, 1983
Accepted on March 22, 1984


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