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Yale, M. E., Messinger,
D. S., Cobo-Lewis, A. B., Oller, D. K., & Eilers, R. E. (1999). An
event-based analysis of early infant vocalizations and facial actions. Developmental
Psychology, 35, 505513.
This study used an event-based approach to provide empirical evidence regarding the nature
of coordination in 3- and 6-month-old infants. Vocalizations and facial actions of 12
normally developing infants interacting with their caregivers were coded. Coded
vocalizations and facial actions were considered coordinated when they temporally
overlapped. Results indicate that infants coordinated their vocalizations and facial
actions more than expected by chance. Coordinated events were governed by 2 sequence
patterns. When 2 communicative events were temporally associated across modalities, 1
event tended to be completely embedded within the other, and vocalizations tended to end
before facial actions. This study provides new information about how infant communication
is structured, confirms results from other coordination studies, and describes a new
method for analysis of event-based data.
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