Infants' Cries May Predict Later Language Development

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Infants' Cries May Predict Later Language Development

consumer.healthday.com

Infants' Cries May Predict Later Language Development

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Tags: Children's Health

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Most Recently Shared on May 26, 2011 at 12:43 pm By:

pragmaticmom PragmaticMom

ty4RT @HosiaLVOT: Less complex crying may be indicator of language delay in babies http://bit.ly/k10nsT #baby

11 months ago...

Infants' Cries May Predict Later Language Development - Drugs.com MedNews

drugs.com — “The level of complexity of infants cries may help to predict which babies are at risk for language delays, new research suggests. German researchers compared thView full resource at drugs.com

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Most Recently Shared on May 20, 2011 at 9:17 pm By:

Drugs_Devices Drugs and Devices OW OW Health

Infants' Cries May Predict Later Language Development: FRIDAY, May 20 -- The level of complexity of infant... http://bit.ly/iepT5I #drug

11 months ago...

Infants' Cries May Predict Later Language Development

health.msn.com — “Infants' Cries May Predict Later Language DevelopmentView full resource at health.msn.com

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Most Recently Shared on May 20, 2011 at 8:28 pm By:

In brain-injured children, early gesturing predicts language delays

sciencedaily.com — “A new study has found that gesturing at 18 months (but not early speech) predicted which children with pre- or perinatal brain lesions had vocabulary delays a year later. The results suggest that gesture may be a tool for diagnosing persistent language delay in such children. This research is important because about 1 in 4,000 infants has this type of brain injury, and intervention early in development may be critical to successful remediation of language delay.View full resource at sciencedaily.com

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Most Recently Shared on March 26, 2010 at 5:13 pm By:

RelationshipsOW OrganizedWisdom OW Health

In brain-injured children, early gesturing predicts language delays: A new study has found that gest... http://bit.ly/dx2Vkj #relationships

2 years ago...

In brain-injured children, early gesturing predicts language delays

sciencedaily.com — “A new study has found that gesturing at 18 months (but not early speech) predicted which children with pre- or perinatal brain lesions had vocabulary delays a year later. The results suggest that gesture may be a tool for diagnosing persistent language delay in such children. This research is important because about 1 in 4,000 infants has this type of brain injury, and intervention early in development may be critical to successful remediation of language delay.View full resource at sciencedaily.com

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Most Recently Shared on March 26, 2010 at 3:37 pm By:

jcbreed Jonathan Reed Doctor and Psychologist

RT @sciencedaily In brain-injured children, early gesturing predicts language delays: A new study has found http://bit.ly/dzUDsf

2 years ago...

In brain-injured children, early gesturing predicts language delays

feeds.sciencedaily.com — “A new study has found that gesturing at 18 months (but not early speech) predicted which children with pre- or perinatal brain lesions had vocabulary delays a year later. The results suggest that gesture may be a tool for diagnosing persistent language delay in such children. This research is important because about 1 in 4,000 infants has this type of brain injury, and intervention early in development may be critical to successful remediation of language delay.View full resource at feeds.sciencedaily.com

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Most Recently Shared on March 26, 2010 at 3:15 pm By:

sciencedaily sciencedaily Health News

In brain-injured children, early gesturing predicts language delays: A new study has found that gesturing at 18 mo... http://bit.ly/dzUDsf

2 years ago...

In brain-injured children, early gesturing predicts language delays

eurekalert.org — “A new study has found that gesturing at 18 months (but not early speech) predicted which children with pre- or perinatal brain lesions had vocabulary delays a year later. The results suggest that gesture may be a tool for diagnosing persistent language delay in such children. This research is important because about 1 in 4,000 infants has this type of brain injury, and intervention early in development may be critical to successful remediation of language delay.View full resource at eurekalert.org

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Most Recently Shared on March 25, 2010 at 4:25 am By:

eurekalert science news Health News

AAAS In brain-injured children, early gesturing predicts language delays http://bit.ly/ceIVnL

2 years ago...

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