This article presents a study that examined the impact of visual communication on the quality of the early interaction between deaf and hearing mothers and fathers and their deaf children aged between 18 and 24 months. Three communication mode groups of parent-deaf child dyads that differed by the use of signing and visual-tactile communication strategies were involved: (a) hearing parents communicating with their deaf child in an auditory/oral way, (b) hearing parents using total communication, and (c) deaf parents using sign language. Based on Loots and colleagues' intersubjective developmental theory, parent-deaf child interaction was analyzed according to the occurrence of intersubjectivity during free play with a standard set of toys. The data analyses indicated that the use of sign language in a sequential visual way of communication enabled the deaf parents to involve their 18-to 24-month-old deaf infants in symbolic intersubjectivity, whereas hearing parents who hold on to oral-only communication were excluded from involvement in symbolic intersubjectivity with their deaf infants. Hearing parents using total communication were more similar to deaf parents, but they still differed from deaf parents in exchanging and sharing symbolic and linguistic meaning with their deaf child.Although most researchers emphasize the importance of synchrony, reciprocity, contingency, and joint involvement during parent-infant interactions, studies on early parent-deaf child interaction mostly concentrate on the individual behaviors of caregivers and/or children as the unit of analysis, rather than focusing on the dynamic quality of the interaction itself. Much research has been directed towards identifying the characteristics of hearing and deaf mothers or their deaf infants that affects the nature of their interaction, or the infants' later development, or both. Apart from some studies that used rating scales to assess the quality of the mother-deaf child dyadic unit as a whole
This article presents the results of a study comparing deaf and hearing parents in the use of visual-tactile communication strategies during interaction with their hearing-impaired children between 18 and 24 months of age. The study includes 17 deaf and hard-of-hearing children and 33 parents, covering hearing mothers (n = 12), hearing fathers (n = 11), deaf mothers (n = 5), and deaf fathers (n = 5). The four groups of parents are compared in the use of visual-tactile communication strategies during free play with their children. Overall results show that deaf mothers and deaf fathers differ significantly from hearing parents in the use of a visual communication style adapted to the developmental communication needs and abilities related to the 18- to 24-month age period. The study pays special attention to differences in visual-tactile communication strategies according to hearing status, gender, use of languages, and communication modes.
In this article, an intersubjective developmental theory that focuses primarily on the development of the interworld between the caregiver and the infant is used to integrate and interpret the seemingly incoherent and contradictory research findings on the interactions between mothers and their infants with visual impairments. The implications for further research and early intervention practices are presented.
Most research into interactions between mothers and their infants
with hearing impairments focuses on mothers' and infants' behaviors
separately, speculating about the interplay among these behaviors
and their effects on child development. In the present article, an
intersubjective developmental theory focusing on the development of the
"interworld" between deaf and hearing mothers and their deaf infants is
used to integrate and interpret the seemingly incoherent research on
early mother-deaf child interaction. Inspired by Stern's work (e.g.,
Stern, 1985), the intersubjective developmental theory distinguishes
four stages in the development of intersubjectivity: emerging (birth-2
months), physical (2-8 months), existential (8-13 months), and symbolic
(13 months and older), each characterized by a different type of
mother-infant interaction. The integration of research findings on
early mother-deaf child interaction into these four developmental stages
offers new perspectives that can advance research and resolve certain
early-intervention issues.
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