Are there differences in the acquisition of theory of mind between deaf children of deaf parents and hearing parents with respect to normal hearing children? A review

Introduction: Deaf children have a limitation in perceiving oral language, this limitation affects the development of cognitive abilities, as is the case of the development of the Theory of Mind (ToM). Objective: To identify the difficulties that deaf children have in the acquisition of ToM, due to...

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Main Authors: Isabel RODRÍGUEZ-RABADÁN-PEINADO, Diana MONFORTE-PÉREZ
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca 2019-04-01
Series:Revista ORL
Subjects:
tom
Online Access:https://revistas.usal.es/index.php/2444-7986/article/view/19539
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spelling doaj-f6e9db9850d24aa2920dd55154e2ae7f2020-11-25T03:37:40ZspaEdiciones Universidad de SalamancaRevista ORL2444-79862019-04-0110213314010.14201/orl.1953916625Are there differences in the acquisition of theory of mind between deaf children of deaf parents and hearing parents with respect to normal hearing children? A reviewIsabel RODRÍGUEZ-RABADÁN-PEINADODiana MONFORTE-PÉREZIntroduction: Deaf children have a limitation in perceiving oral language, this limitation affects the development of cognitive abilities, as is the case of the development of the Theory of Mind (ToM). Objective: To identify the difficulties that deaf children have in the acquisition of ToM, due to the type of communication they have with their parents. Methodology: Research question: How does the lack of access to conversations influence the type of communication that parents have with their children in the development of the Theory of Mind? Bibliographic review of the main databases: Pubmed, Dialnet, Plinio, EbscoHost and ProQuest. The most relevant articles published between 2000 and 2016 have been accepted. Studies conducted on profound and pre-lingual deaf children of deaf and hearing parents, studies on the development of ToM in deaf children of deaf parents and hearing parents were reviewed, with hearing children of hearing parents and, lastly, interactions that hearing mothers have with deaf children and hearing children. In all of them, the type of communication used was sign language (SL). Results: The lack of access to conversations about mental states mediated using SL, produces a delay in the acquisition of ToM in deaf children of hearing parents. Conclusions: The communication of parents with their children has a direct impact on the development of ToM. Deaf children of deaf parents develop ToM earlier than deaf children of hearing parents, since they are immersed in conversations referring to mental states from birth.https://revistas.usal.es/index.php/2444-7986/article/view/19539teoría de la mentetomniños sordospadres sordosfalsas creenciascomunicaciónconversación
collection DOAJ
language Spanish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Isabel RODRÍGUEZ-RABADÁN-PEINADO
Diana MONFORTE-PÉREZ
spellingShingle Isabel RODRÍGUEZ-RABADÁN-PEINADO
Diana MONFORTE-PÉREZ
Are there differences in the acquisition of theory of mind between deaf children of deaf parents and hearing parents with respect to normal hearing children? A review
Revista ORL
teoría de la mente
tom
niños sordos
padres sordos
falsas creencias
comunicación
conversación
author_facet Isabel RODRÍGUEZ-RABADÁN-PEINADO
Diana MONFORTE-PÉREZ
author_sort Isabel RODRÍGUEZ-RABADÁN-PEINADO
title Are there differences in the acquisition of theory of mind between deaf children of deaf parents and hearing parents with respect to normal hearing children? A review
title_short Are there differences in the acquisition of theory of mind between deaf children of deaf parents and hearing parents with respect to normal hearing children? A review
title_full Are there differences in the acquisition of theory of mind between deaf children of deaf parents and hearing parents with respect to normal hearing children? A review
title_fullStr Are there differences in the acquisition of theory of mind between deaf children of deaf parents and hearing parents with respect to normal hearing children? A review
title_full_unstemmed Are there differences in the acquisition of theory of mind between deaf children of deaf parents and hearing parents with respect to normal hearing children? A review
title_sort are there differences in the acquisition of theory of mind between deaf children of deaf parents and hearing parents with respect to normal hearing children? a review
publisher Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca
series Revista ORL
issn 2444-7986
publishDate 2019-04-01
description Introduction: Deaf children have a limitation in perceiving oral language, this limitation affects the development of cognitive abilities, as is the case of the development of the Theory of Mind (ToM). Objective: To identify the difficulties that deaf children have in the acquisition of ToM, due to the type of communication they have with their parents. Methodology: Research question: How does the lack of access to conversations influence the type of communication that parents have with their children in the development of the Theory of Mind? Bibliographic review of the main databases: Pubmed, Dialnet, Plinio, EbscoHost and ProQuest. The most relevant articles published between 2000 and 2016 have been accepted. Studies conducted on profound and pre-lingual deaf children of deaf and hearing parents, studies on the development of ToM in deaf children of deaf parents and hearing parents were reviewed, with hearing children of hearing parents and, lastly, interactions that hearing mothers have with deaf children and hearing children. In all of them, the type of communication used was sign language (SL). Results: The lack of access to conversations about mental states mediated using SL, produces a delay in the acquisition of ToM in deaf children of hearing parents. Conclusions: The communication of parents with their children has a direct impact on the development of ToM. Deaf children of deaf parents develop ToM earlier than deaf children of hearing parents, since they are immersed in conversations referring to mental states from birth.
topic teoría de la mente
tom
niños sordos
padres sordos
falsas creencias
comunicación
conversación
url https://revistas.usal.es/index.php/2444-7986/article/view/19539
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