Early parental multimodal input is differentially associated with later vocabulary knowledge for preterm and full-term infants

Multimodal Input
Preterm Infants
Word Comprehension
Word Production
Gesture
Language Development
Authors
Affiliations
Işıl Doğan

Koç University

Erim Kızıldere

Koç University

Koç University

Aslı Aktan Erciyes

Kadir Has University

University of Iowa

İpek Akman

Maltepe University

Koç University

Published

July 15, 2025

Doi


This study examined whether (1) parents’ language input and its modality differed in Turkish-learning preterm (PT) (<37 weeks of gestation) and full-term infants (FT), and (2) the type of language input (i.e. verbal and multimodal) had differential concurrent and longitudinal effects on PT and FT infants’ vocabulary development. At Time 1 (Mage = 14 months, N = 73, 36 PT) and Time 2 (Mage = 20.1 months, N = 61, 27 PT), PT infants’ parents produced fewer frequent multimodal input (i.e., co-speech deictic gestures) than FT infants’ parents. The frequency of verbal input (i.e., word count) between groups differed only at Time 1. Parents’ verbal input was concurrently associated with infants’ receptive vocabulary at 14 months, yet parents’ multimodal input was only linked to PT infants’ receptive vocabulary. At 20 months, parents’ verbal input was not related to expressive vocabulary in either group; however, parents’ multimodal input was again associated with PT infants’ expressive vocabulary scores. Parents’ multimodal input at 14 months predicted infants’ expressive vocabulary scores at 20 months, only for the PT group. These findings suggest that the variability of multimodal input infants receives from their parents and the contribution of such input to vocabulary development change as a function of infants’ neonatal status.

Click here to read this article!