Language development in infants with hearing loss: Benefits of infant-directed speech
Date
2022Author
Lovcevic, Irena
Burnham, Denis
Kalashnikova, Marina
Metadata
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Irena Lovcevic, Denis Burnham, Marina Kalashnikova, Language development in infants with hearing loss: Benefits of infant-directed speech, Infant Behavior and Development, Volume 67, 2022, 101699, ISSN 0163-6383, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.infbeh.2022.101699
Abstract
The majority of infants with permanent congenital hearing loss fall significantly behind their
normal hearing peers in the development of receptive and expressive oral communication skills.
Independent of any prosthetic intervention (“hardware”) for infants with hearing loss, the social
and linguistic environment (“software”) can still be optimal or sub-optimal and so can exert
significant positive or negative effects on speech and language acquisition, with far-reaching
beneficial or adverse effects, respectively. This review focusses on the nature of the social and
linguistic environment of infants with hearing loss, in particular others’ speech to infants. The
nature of this “infant-directed speech” and its effects on language development has been studied
extensively in hearing infants but far less comprehensively in infants with hearing loss. Here,
literature on the nature of infant-directed speech and its impact on the speech perception and
language acquisition in infants with hearing loss is reviewed. The review brings together evidence
on the little-studied effects of infant-directed speech on speech and language development in
infants with hearing loss, and provides suggestions, over and above early screening and external
treatment, for a natural intervention at the level of the carer-infant microcosm that may well
optimize the early linguistic experiences and mitigate later adverse effects for infants born with
hearing loss.