Despite decades of study, we still know less than we would like
about the association between joint attention (JA) and language
acquisition. This is partly because of disagreements on how to
operationalise JA. In this study, we examine the impact of applying
two different, influential JA operationalisation schemes to the same
dataset of child-caregiver interactions, to determine which yields a
better fit to children's later vocabulary size. Two coding schemes—
one defining JA in terms of gaze overlap and one in terms of social
aspects of shared attention—were applied to video-recordings of
dyadic naturalistic toy-play interactions (N=45). We found that JA
was predictive of later production vocabulary when operationalised
as shared focus (study 1), but also that its operationalisation as
shared social awareness increased its predictive power (study 2).
Our results emphasise the critical role of methodological choices in
understanding how and why JA is associated with vocabulary size.