“…The ability to imitate the goals of actions in the second year of life predicts language production skills at 3 years (Charman et al, 2000) and can even predict whether an infant exhibits later language delays (Zambrana, Ystrom, Schjølberg, & Pons, 2013). Engaging in joint attention, which involves sharing attention with a partner to a third entity, such as when an infant is attending simultaneously to both a parent and a toy (Seibert, Hogan, & Mundy, 1982;Tomasello & Farrar, 1986), involves much of the behaviors used to measure infants' action understanding listed above and has been implicated as a manifestation of infants' intention understanding (Salo, Rowe, & Reeb-Sutherland, 2018). In line with this interpretation, there is a bounty of evidence linking infants' ability to initiate and respond to bids for joint attention with concurrent and later language abilities (Bates, Benigni, Bretherton, Camaioni, & Volterra, 1979;Camaioni, Castelli, Longobardi, & Volterra, 1991;Desrochers, Morissette, & Ricard, 1995;Markus, Mundy, Morales, Delgado, & Yale, 2000;Morales et al, 2000;Morales, Mundy, & Rojas, 1998;Mundy & Gomes, 1998).…”