Development of the Childhood Nonverbal Communication Scale.

Mohammad Majid Oryadi-Zanjani
Author Information
  1. Mohammad Majid Oryadi-Zanjani: Department of Speech Therapy, School of Rehabilitation Sciences, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Abiverdi 1, Chamran Blvd., P.O. Box: 71345-1733, Shiraz, Iran. oryadim@gmail.com. ORCID

Abstract

The aim of this study was to develop and validate the Childhood Nonverbal Communication Scale (CNCS) to assess nonverbal communication skills in children from birth to 18 months old. An extensive review of existing research provided evidence used to generate items representative of nonverbal communication behaviors. The final version of the CNCS includes 37 items divided in two dimensions (CNCS-1 and CNCS-2) showing high content validity (item-rated content validity index ≥ 0.75). The scale was administered to 428 Iranian Persian-speaking children 3 to 18 months old with normal development. According to the findings, the CNCS showed strong internal consistency (KR-20 = 0.965). Further, it had good convergent validity based on a significant correlation between total scores and the results of the Persian version of the Production of Infant Scale Evaluation (PRISE-P) (r = 0.5, P < 0.01). Therefore, the CNCS is a promising tool for measuring nonverbal communication in Iranian children from birth to 18 months of age.

Keywords

References

  1. Front Psychol. 2019 May 28;10:1211 [PMID: 31191403]
  2. Iran J Public Health. 2013 May 01;42(5):522-8 [PMID: 23802111]
  3. Psychol Bull. 1973 Sep;80(3):247-56 [PMID: 4731735]
  4. Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol. 2018 Oct;113:76-81 [PMID: 30174015]
  5. J Speech Lang Hear Res. 2004 Jun;47(3):663-77 [PMID: 15212576]
  6. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2002 Jul 9;99(14):9602-5 [PMID: 12082186]
  7. J Speech Lang Hear Res. 1999 Aug;42(4):915-24 [PMID: 10450911]
  8. Pediatrics. 2009 May;123(5):1383-91 [PMID: 19403506]
  9. J Autism Dev Disord. 2018 Oct;48(10):3417-3431 [PMID: 29767824]
  10. J Speech Hear Res. 1995 Feb;38(1):157-67 [PMID: 7537345]
  11. Niger Postgrad Med J. 2015 Oct-Dec;22(4):195-201 [PMID: 26776330]
  12. J Psycholinguist Res. 1974 Apr;3(2):101-16 [PMID: 4826639]
  13. Dev Psychol. 2013 Oct;49(10):1931-42 [PMID: 23231694]
  14. J Autism Dev Disord. 2008 Nov;38(10):1898-906 [PMID: 18491223]
  15. Science. 1977 Oct 7;198(4312):75-8 [PMID: 17741897]
  16. J Speech Lang Hear Res. 2018 Nov 8;61(11):2673-2684 [PMID: 30418495]
  17. J Autism Dev Disord. 2018 Jan;48(1):55-71 [PMID: 28900778]
  18. Int J Dev Neurosci. 2005 Apr-May;23(2-3):143-52 [PMID: 15749241]
  19. Iran J Pediatr. 2012 Mar;22(1):28-34 [PMID: 23056856]
  20. Am J Ment Retard. 2004 Jul;109(4):285-300 [PMID: 15176918]

MeSH Term

Behavior Rating Scale
Communication Disorders
Female
Humans
Infant
Infant, Newborn
Iran
Male
Nonverbal Communication
Psychometrics
Reproducibility of Results

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0communicationCNCSnonverbalchildrenNonverbalScale18 monthsvalidityChildhoodCommunicationbirtholditemsversioncontentscaleIranianPersian-speakingdevelopmenttooldisordersDevelopmentalaimstudydevelopvalidateassessskillsextensivereviewexistingresearchprovidedevidenceusedgeneraterepresentativebehaviorsfinalincludes37dividedtwodimensionsCNCS-1CNCS-2showinghighitem-ratedindex ≥ 075administered4283normalAccordingfindingsshowedstronginternalconsistencyKR-20 = 0965goodconvergentbasedsignificantcorrelationtotalscoresresultsPersianProductionInfantEvaluationPRISE-Pr = 05P < 001ThereforepromisingmeasuringageDevelopmentAutismspectrumscreeningchildhood

Similar Articles

Cited By