| Literature DB >> 25478306 |
Lea Hyvärinen1, Renate Walthes2, Namita Jacob3, Kay Nottingham Chaplin4, Mercè Leonhardt5.
Abstract
The current understanding of what infants see varies greatly among healthcare and education specialists. Even among ophthalmologists and pediatric neurologists in charge of clinical examinations of infants, opinions vary on what infants perceive, recognize, and use for communication and learning. It is, therefore, of interest to review publications from several specialties to learn whether new information is available on the development of visual functions and use of vision. Ten percent of total publications on this subject are reviewed here based on the usefulness of their content for improving early diagnosis and intervention of vision disorders in infants.Entities:
Keywords: Autism; Early communication; Early intervention; Face recognition; Infancy; Vision development
Year: 2014 PMID: 25478306 PMCID: PMC4243010 DOI: 10.1007/s40135-014-0056-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Ophthalmol Rep ISSN: 2167-4868
The important functional visual milestones related to communication, motor functions, perception and recognition of forms, and awareness of and orientation in space during the 1st year can be easily observed in typically developing infants
| 1. Vision in the newborn period | 1st milestone |
| 2. Eye contact and early interaction | 2nd milestone |
| 3. Awareness of hands, motor functions, and anticipation | 3rd milestone |
| 4. Recognition of faces, moving, and form perception | 4th milestone |
| 5. Matching abstract forms in examination of vision | 5th milestone |