# Growing Communicators: A Fine‐Grained Analysis of Toddlers' Communicative Intentions From Requestive and Expressive, to Information Seeking and Giving

**Authors:** Didar Karadağ, Gert Westermann, Marina Bazhydai

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/infa.70072 · Infancy · 2026-02-25

## TL;DR

This study examines how toddlers use gestures to communicate different intentions, showing how their communication skills develop between 13 and 23 months.

## Contribution

The study introduces a novel coding scheme to analyze toddlers' communicative intentions in naturalistic settings.

## Key findings

- Expressive interactions made up nearly half of all toddler communication events.
- Requestive interactions were the second most common type of communication.
- Information giving was the least common communicative intention observed.

## Abstract

Children readily respond to others' bids for communicative interactions from early childhood and actively initiate these themselves. However, the extent and variety of early child‐initiated communicative intentions is poorly understood, with theoretically derived intentions lacking systematic empirical support from naturalistic observations. This study, using a cross‐sectional data set, provides a fine‐grained characterization of communicative behaviors across three time points in the second year of life (13, 18, and 23 months, N = 47). We coded one‐hour‐long video recordings of home observations using a novel coding scheme to document the type of interactions toddlers initiated using four deictic gestures (reach, point, give, hold out) to meet a range of communicative goals, such as sharing interest, attention, or emotion, requesting an object or an action, seeking information or help, and giving information. Expressive interactions accounted for 49.9% of events, followed by requestive (40%), information/help seeking (8.3%), and information giving intentions (1.7%). These findings characterize early communicative toddler‐caregiver interactions and provide insights into the age‐related patterns of toddlers' propensity to seek and transmit information which emerge increasingly as part of toddlers' communicative repertoire.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** language delays (MESH:D007805)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12935696/full.md

## References

112 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12935696/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12935696