社交互动抵消了使用数字媒体对儿童词汇量的不利影响。

Frontiers in developmental psychology Pub Date : 2024-01-01 Epub Date: 2024-05-27 DOI:10.3389/fdpys.2024.1401736
Sarah C Kucker, Julie M Schneider
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引用次数: 0

摘要

幼儿在出生后最初几年词汇量增长迅速,这主要得益于与照看者的社交互动以及越来越多的数字媒体。然而,在不同的社会经济阶层,接触这两种来源的数量可能会有很大差异,而且人们对社交互动和数字媒体的使用如何共同预测出生后最初几年的词汇量知之甚少。目前的研究迈出了第一步,研究了在社会经济多元化的样本中,与他人增加社交互动是否可以缓冲使用数字媒体对语言的潜在不利影响。305 名 17 到 30 个月大儿童的照顾者填写了有关其家庭人口统计、孩子的技术使用、孩子的日常生活和社交互动的调查问卷。研究结果表明,与社交活动较多、使用科技较少的同龄人相比,人际交往较少、接触科技较多的儿童词汇量较小,而且随着年龄的增长,这种差距会越来越大。此外,社交互动的数量可以调节社会经济地位、数字媒体和词汇量之间的联系,因此,数字媒体对低社会经济地位家庭儿童词汇量的负面影响可以通过增加社交互动来抵消。总之,这表明,在数字媒体使用十分普遍的今天,增加人际交往的数量可能会成为词汇成果的保护因素。
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Social interactions offset the detrimental effects of digital media use on children's vocabulary.

Young children's rapid vocabulary growth during the first few years is supported by input during social interactions with caregivers and, increasingly, from digital media. However, the amount of exposure to both sources can vary substantially across socioeconomic classes, and little is known about how social interactions and digital media use together predict vocabulary in the first few years of life. The current study takes a first step toward examining whether increased social interactions with other individuals may buffer the potentially detrimental effects of digital media use on language among a socioeconomically diverse sample. 305 caregivers of children between 17 and 30-months completed questionnaires about their family demographics, their child's technology use, and the child's daily routines and social interactions. Findings suggest children who experience fewer human interactions and greater technology exposure have smaller vocabularies than their peers who socialize more and use less technology, and this disparity becomes greater as children get older. Moreover, the number of social interactions moderates the link between SES, digital media, and vocabulary such that the negative impact of digital media on vocabulary for children from low SES households can be offset with increased social interactions. Together, this suggests that increasing the amount of human interactions may serve as a protective factor for vocabulary outcomes in a world where digital media use is prominent.

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