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Dive into the research topics where Meaghan V. Parladé is active.

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Featured researches published by Meaghan V. Parladé.


Infant Behavior & Development | 2009

Anticipatory Smiling: Linking Early Affective Communication and Social Outcome

Meaghan V. Parladé; Daniel S. Messinger; Christine E. F. Delgado; Marygrace Yale Kaiser; Amy Vaughan Van Hecke; Peter Mundy

In anticipatory smiles, infants appear to communicate pre-existing positive affect by smiling at an object and then turning the smile toward an adult. We report two studies in which the precursors, development, and consequences of anticipatory smiling were investigated. Study 1 revealed a positive correlation between infant smiling at 6 months and the level of anticipatory smiling at 8 and 10 months during joint attention episodes, as well as a positive correlation between anticipatory smiling and parent-rated social expressivity scores at 30 months. Study 2 confirmed a developmental increase in the number of infants using anticipatory smiles between 9 and 12 months that had been initially documented in the Study 1 sample [Venezia, M., Messinger, D. S., Thorp, D., & Mundy, P. (2004). The development of anticipatory smiling. Infancy, 6(3), 397-406]. Additionally, anticipatory smiling at 9 months positively predicted parent-rated social competence scores at 30 months. Findings are discussed with regard to the importance of anticipatory smiling in early socioemotional development.


Developmental Psychology | 2013

Spontaneous initiation of communication in infants at low and heightened risk for autism spectrum disorders.

Breanna M. Winder; Robert H. Wozniak; Meaghan V. Parladé; Jana M. Iverson

Communication spontaneously initiated by infants at heightened risk (HR; n = 15) for autism spectrum disorders (ASD) is compared with that in low-risk (LR; n = 15) infants at 13 and 18 months of age. Infants were observed longitudinally during naturalistic in-home interaction and semistructured play with caregivers. At both ages, HR infants spontaneously produced Words, Communicative Non-Word Vocalizations, show and point Gestures, and Gesture + Non-Word Vocalization combinations at lower rates than LR peers. This difference also held for Gesture + Word combinations at 18 but not 13 months. At 36 months, all HR children were evaluated for ASD, and 3 received a diagnosis of autistic disorder. At both 13 and 18 months, these 3 children had been at or near the bottom of the distribution on all spontaneous communication variables.


Developmental Psychology | 2011

The Interplay Between Language, Gesture, and Affect During Communicative Transition: A Dynamic Systems Approach

Meaghan V. Parladé; Jana M. Iverson

From a dynamic systems perspective, transition points in development are times of increased instability, during which behavioral patterns are susceptible to temporary decoupling. This study investigated the impact of the vocabulary spurt on existing patterns of communicative coordination. Eighteen typically developing infants were videotaped at home 1 month before, at, and after the vocabulary spurt. Infants were identified as spurters if they underwent a discrete phase transition in vocabulary development (marked by an inflection point), and compared with a group of nonspurters whose word-learning rates followed a trajectory of continuous change. Relative to surrounding sessions, there were significant reductions in overall coordination of communicative behaviors and in words produced in coordination at the vocabulary spurt session for infants who experienced more dramatic vocabulary growth. In contrast, nonspurters demonstrated little change across sessions. Findings underscore the importance of transitions as opportunities for observing processes of developmental change.


Infant Behavior & Development | 2012

Infant Responding to Joint Attention, Executive Processes, and Self-Regulation in Preschool Children

Amy Vaughan Van Hecke; Peter Mundy; Jessica J. Block; Christine E. F. Delgado; Meaghan V. Parladé; Yuly B. Pomares; Jessica A. Hobson

Infant joint attention is related to behavioral and social outcomes, as well as language in childhood. Recent research and theory suggests that the relations between joint attention and social-behavioral outcomes may reflect the role of executive self-regulatory processes in the development of joint attention. To test this hypothesis two studies were conducted. The first, cross-sectional study examined the development of responding to joint attention (RJA) skill in terms of increasing executive efficiency of responding between 9 and 18 months of age. The results indicated that development of RJA was characterized by a decreased latency to shift attention in following another persons gaze and head turn, as well as an increase in the proportion of correct RJA responses exhibited by older infants. The second study examined the longitudinal relations between 12-month measures of responding to joint attention and 36-month attention regulation in a delay of gratification task. The results indicated that responding to joint attention at 12-months was significantly related to childrens use of three types of self-regulation behaviors while waiting for a snack reward at 36 months of age. These observations are discussed in light of a developmental theory of attention regulation and joint attention in infancy.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2015

The Development of Coordinated Communication in Infants at Heightened Risk for Autism Spectrum Disorder

Meaghan V. Parladé; Jana M. Iverson

This study evaluated the extent to which developmental change in coordination of social communication in early infancy differentiates children eventually diagnosed with ASD from those not likely to develop the disorder. A prospective longitudinal design was used to compare nine infants at heightened risk for ASD (HR) later diagnosed with ASD, to 13 HR infants with language delay, 28 HR infants with no diagnosis, and 30 low risk infants. Hierarchical linear modeling analyses revealed that ASD infants exhibited significantly slower growth in coordinations overall and in gestures coordinated with vocalizations, even relative to HR infants with language delay. Disruption in the development of gesture–vocalization coordinations may result in negative cascading effects that adversely impact later social and linguistic development.


Rivista di psicolinguistica applicata | 2010

The Reorganization of Communicative Behaviors around the Onset of the Vocabulary Spurt

Jana M. Iverson; Meaghan V. Parladé

This study investigated the reorganization of communicative behaviors during the window of time surrounding the vocabulary spurt by considering the relationship between language, gesture, and affect as the communicative system undergoes a period of instability. Eighteen typically developing infants were videotaped with a primary caregiver at home one month before, at, and one month after the onset of the vocabulary spurt. There were significant differences between the vocabulary spurt session and surrounding sessions in terms of the production and temporal patterning of expressive behaviors. Specifically, the coordination of communicative behaviors occurred less frequently; speech was particularly unlikely to appear in coordination with other behaviors; and the use of earlier well-practiced configurations (e.g., affect combined with meaningless vocalizations) increased specifically at the spurt session. In addition, infants who experienced a more dramatic transition in vocabulary development showed evidence of greater system-wide instability at the vocabulary spurt onset. Findings underscore the importance of examining the communicative system as a whole and using a milestone-based dynamic systems approach to studying developmental change.


Child Development | 2007

Individual Differences and the Development of Joint Attention in Infancy

Peter Mundy; Jessica J. Block; Christine E. F. Delgado; Yuly B. Pomares; Amy Vaughan Van Hecke; Meaghan V. Parladé


Child Development | 2007

Infant Joint Attention, Temperament, and Social Competence in Preschool Children

Amy Vaughan Van Hecke; Peter Mundy; C. Françoise. Acra; Jessica J. Block; Christine E. F. Delgado; Meaghan V. Parladé; Jessica A. Meyer; A. Rebecca Neal; Yuly B. Pomares


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2018

Early Gesture and Vocabulary Development in Infant Siblings of Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder

Jana M. Iverson; Jessie B. Northrup; Nina B. Leezenbaum; Meaghan V. Parladé; Erin A. Koterba; Kelsey L. West


International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders | 2018

Coordination is key: Joint attention and vocalisation in infant siblings of children with Autism Spectrum Disorder: Joint attention and vocalisation in ASD

Perrine Heymann; Jessie B. Northrup; Kelsey L. West; Meaghan V. Parladé; Nina B. Leezenbaum; Jana M. Iverson

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Peter Mundy

University of California

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Kelsey L. West

University of Pittsburgh

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Nina B. Leezenbaum

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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