Abstract
The language patterns of 10 mothers and 10 fathers with their firstborn 3-year-old sons were compared. Ten-minute mother-son and father-son conversations were recorded independently in the home during a free-play session with standard play mterials. The findings of this study indicate that although mothers and fathers used a similar number of utterances in conversing with their sons over a 10-minute period, their patterns of speech were different on a number of quantitative measures including MLU, MLU of five longest utterances, percent of imperatives, and percent of questions. In general, fathers' communication was viewed as more controlling and involving the child less, while mothers' communication was viewed as more child-centered and involving the child more.
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Malone, M.J., Guy, R.F. A comparison of mothers' and fathers' speech to their 3-year-old sons. J Psycholinguist Res 11, 599–608 (1982). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01067614
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01067614