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Attentional abilities constrain language development: A cross-syndrome infant/toddler study
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Sleep is atypical across neurodevelopmental disorders in infants and toddlers: A cross-syndrome study
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Down syndrome and parental depression: a double hit on early expressive language development
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Attentional abilities constrain language development: a cross-syndrome infant/toddler study
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A multi-level developmental approach to exploring individual differences in Down syndrome: genes, brain, behaviour, and environment
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Health comorbidities and cognitive abilities across the lifespan in Down syndrome. ...
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A multi-level developmental approach to exploring individual differences in Down syndrome: genes, brain, behaviour, and environment. ...
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Down syndrome and parental depression: A double hit on early expressive language development. ...
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Down syndrome and parental depression: A double hit on early expressive language development.
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A multi-level developmental approach to exploring individual differences in Down syndrome: genes, brain, behaviour, and environment.
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Health comorbidities and cognitive abilities across the lifespan in Down syndrome.
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Down syndrome and parental depression: A double hit on early expressive language development
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Abstract:
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Down syndrome (DS) is often characterised by intellectual disability with particular difficulties in expressive language. However, large individual differences exist in expressive language across development in DS. In the general population, one of the factors associated with variability in this domain is parental depression. We investigated whether this is also the case in young children with DS. METHODS: Thirty-eight children with DS between 8 and 48 months of age participated in this study. Their parents reported on the children’s receptive and expressive vocabularies (MacArthur-Bates Communicative Development Inventory) and on parental depression. Furthermore, an experimenter-led standardized developmental assessment (Mullen Scales of Early Learning) was administered to the children to test five domains: gross motor, fine motor, visual reception, receptive language, and expressive language. RESULTS: A cross-sectional developmental trajectories analysis demonstrated that expressive language developed at a slower rate in children with DS whose parent reported depression than in those whose parent did not. No differences between groups were found in any other domain. CONCLUSION: Parental depression is associated with slower rate of expressive language development in young children with DS. These findings suggest that DS and parental depression may constitute a double hit leading to increased difficulties in the development of expressive language.
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URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32192950 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7167510/ https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ridd.2020.103613
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A multi-level developmental approach to exploring individual differences in Down syndrome: genes, brain, behaviour, and environment
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In: Res Dev Disabil (2020)
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Narrowing Perceptual Sensitivity to the Native Language in Infancy: Exogenous Influences on Developmental Timing
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Fractionating nonword repetition: the contributions of short-term memory and oromotor praxis are different
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Intelligence as a developing function: a Neuroconstructivist approach
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Syndromic Autism: progressing beyond current levels of description
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Distinct profiles of information-use characterize identity judgments in children and low-expertise adults
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Precursors to language development in typically and atypically developing infants and toddlers: the importance of embracing complexity
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Fractionating nonword repetition:The contributions of short-term memory and oromotor praxis are different
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