A longitudinal study with 45 children (Hispanic, 13%; non-Hispanic, 87%) investigated
whether the early production of non-referential beat and flip gestures, as opposed to
referential iconic gestures, in parent-child naturalistic interactions from 14 to 58 months old
predicts narrative abilities at age 5. Results revealed that only non-referential beats
significantly (p < .01) predicted later narrative productions. The pragmatic functions of the
children’s speech that accompany these gestures ...
A longitudinal study with 45 children (Hispanic, 13%; non-Hispanic, 87%) investigated
whether the early production of non-referential beat and flip gestures, as opposed to
referential iconic gestures, in parent-child naturalistic interactions from 14 to 58 months old
predicts narrative abilities at age 5. Results revealed that only non-referential beats
significantly (p < .01) predicted later narrative productions. The pragmatic functions of the
children’s speech that accompany these gestures were also analyzed in a representative
sample of 18 parent-child dyads, revealing that beats were typically associated with biased
assertions or questions. These findings show that the early use of beats predicts narrative
abilities later in development, and suggest that this relation is likely due to the pragmatic–
structuring function that beats reflect in early discourse.
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