It Takes a Village To Support the Vocabulary Development of Children With Multiple Risk Factors
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Date
2014
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Amer Psychological Assoc
Open Access Color
Green Open Access
No
OpenAIRE Downloads
OpenAIRE Views
Publicly Funded
No
Abstract
Data from a nationally representative sample from Turkey (N = 1,017) were used to investigate the environmental factors that support the receptive vocabulary of 3-year-old children who differ in their developmental risk due to family low economic status and elevated maternal depressive symptoms. Children's vocabulary knowledge was strongly associated with language stimulation and learning materials in all families regardless of risk status. Maternal warmth and responsiveness supported vocabulary competence in families of low economic status only when maternal depressive symptoms were low. In families with the highest levels of risk, that is, with depression and economic distress jointly present, support by the extended family and neighbors for caring for the child protected children's vocabulary development against these adverse conditions. The empirical evidence on the positive contribution of extrafamilial support to young children's receptive vocabulary under adverse conditions allows an expansion of our current theorizing about influences on language development.
Description
Keywords
receptive vocabulary, language development, social support, maternal depression, SES, 1st 3 Years, Language-Development, Socioeconomic-Status, Maternal Depression, Cognitive-Development, Developing-Countries, Family Processes, Young-Children, Income, Mothers, Male, Language Tests, Turkey, Depression, Mothers, Social Support, Environment, Models, Psychological, Language Development, Vocabulary, Socioeconomic Factors, Risk Factors, Child, Preschool, Humans, Family, Female
Fields of Science
05 social sciences, 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences, 0503 education
Citation
WoS Q
Q2
Scopus Q
Q1

OpenCitations Citation Count
75
Source
Developmental Psychology
Volume
50
Issue
4
Start Page
1014
End Page
1025
PlumX Metrics
Citations
CrossRef : 54
Scopus : 52
PubMed : 10
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Mendeley Readers : 132
SCOPUS™ Citations
52
checked on Mar 15, 2026
Web of Science™ Citations
50
checked on Mar 15, 2026
Page Views
3
checked on Mar 15, 2026
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