Nonverbal communication, play, and language in Greek young children with Williams syndrome
Nonverbal communication, play, and language in Greek young children with Williams syndrome
This study investigated nonverbal communicative abilities, functional play, and symbolic play in 11 toddlers with Williams syndrome (WS) during spontaneous communication. The WS group was compared with a group of typically developing (TD) children matched for linguistic abilities. Results demonstrated that children with WS exhibited significantly less spontaneous functional play and imaginary play compared to TD children. On the other hand, children with WS showed significantly more showing and giving guided by their parents than TD children. In addition, it was shown that in both groups aspects of symbolic play are correlated with expressive as well as receptive language. These findings are interpreted through the Theory of Intersubjectivity, which contrasts with the Theory of Mind and suggests that shared arbitrary purposes regarding actions on objects constitute presuppositions for the development of language.
225-241
Papaeliou, Christina F.
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Fryssira, Helen
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Kodakos, Anastassios
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Kaila, Maria
76ccbbfd-daad-493f-bf03-b5973068fd45
Benaveli, Evangelia
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Michaelides, Konstantinos
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Stroggilos, Vassilis
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Vrettopoulou, Maria
5665b96f-5589-4edb-a079-fe723d5e049b
Polemikos, Nikitas
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Papaeliou, Christina F.
7efe8de7-2c70-486c-bb7b-932b7eed0a46
Fryssira, Helen
09328450-ceac-4973-acce-0c9f64ae2615
Kodakos, Anastassios
bf59efb1-0ccf-4ee9-9c9c-ee9344ad714e
Kaila, Maria
76ccbbfd-daad-493f-bf03-b5973068fd45
Benaveli, Evangelia
3e3f7acf-97a3-4765-a4c3-068fa773f5fa
Michaelides, Konstantinos
6645d0e6-22fc-47ab-be35-c2e536507ba8
Stroggilos, Vassilis
c3f5776e-d0b6-420f-9e65-730028e939b6
Vrettopoulou, Maria
5665b96f-5589-4edb-a079-fe723d5e049b
Polemikos, Nikitas
7483ab17-976d-4eef-8e17-699fc47dec8c
Papaeliou, Christina F., Fryssira, Helen, Kodakos, Anastassios, Kaila, Maria, Benaveli, Evangelia, Michaelides, Konstantinos, Stroggilos, Vassilis, Vrettopoulou, Maria and Polemikos, Nikitas
(2011)
Nonverbal communication, play, and language in Greek young children with Williams syndrome.
Child Neuropsychology, 17 (3), .
(doi:10.1080/09297049.2010.524151).
Abstract
This study investigated nonverbal communicative abilities, functional play, and symbolic play in 11 toddlers with Williams syndrome (WS) during spontaneous communication. The WS group was compared with a group of typically developing (TD) children matched for linguistic abilities. Results demonstrated that children with WS exhibited significantly less spontaneous functional play and imaginary play compared to TD children. On the other hand, children with WS showed significantly more showing and giving guided by their parents than TD children. In addition, it was shown that in both groups aspects of symbolic play are correlated with expressive as well as receptive language. These findings are interpreted through the Theory of Intersubjectivity, which contrasts with the Theory of Mind and suggests that shared arbitrary purposes regarding actions on objects constitute presuppositions for the development of language.
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Accepted/In Press date: 12 June 2010
e-pub ahead of print date: 12 January 2011
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 417927
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/417927
ISSN: 0929-7049
PURE UUID: ac051ddb-fd56-46a2-8381-2d77542146de
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Date deposited: 16 Feb 2018 17:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:36
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Contributors
Author:
Christina F. Papaeliou
Author:
Helen Fryssira
Author:
Anastassios Kodakos
Author:
Maria Kaila
Author:
Evangelia Benaveli
Author:
Konstantinos Michaelides
Author:
Maria Vrettopoulou
Author:
Nikitas Polemikos
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