Literature DB >> 29624833

Infants' visual sustained attention is higher during joint play than solo play: is this due to increased endogenous attention control or exogenous stimulus capture?

Sam V Wass1, Kaili Clackson2, Stanimira D Georgieva2, Laura Brightman2, Rebecca Nutbrown2, Victoria Leong2,3.   

Abstract

Previous research has suggested that when a social partner, such as a parent, pays attention to an object, this increases the attention that infants pay to that object during spontaneous, naturalistic play. There are two contrasting reasons why this might be: first, social context may influence increases in infants' endogenous (voluntary) attention control; second, social settings may offer increased opportunities for exogenous attentional capture. To differentiate these possibilities, we compared 12-month-old infants' naturalistic attention patterns in two settings: Solo Play and Joint Play with a social partner (the parent). Consistent with previous research, we found that infants' look durations toward play objects were longer during Joint Play, and that moments of inattentiveness were fewer, and shorter. Follow-up analyses, conducted to differentiate the two above-proposed hypotheses, were more consistent with the latter hypothesis. We found that infants' rate of change of attentiveness was faster during Joint Play than Solo Play, suggesting that internal attention factors, such as attentional inertia, may influence looking behaviour less during Joint Play. We also found that adults' attention forwards-predicted infants' subsequent attention more than vice versa, suggesting that adults' behaviour may drive infants' behaviour. Finally, we found that mutual gaze did not directly facilitate infant attentiveness. Overall, our results suggest that infants spend more time attending to objects during Joint Play than Solo Play, but that these differences are more likely attributable to increased exogenous attentional scaffolding from the parent during social play, rather than to increased endogenous attention control from the infant.
© 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 29624833     DOI: 10.1111/desc.12667

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Sci        ISSN: 1363-755X


  11 in total

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6.  Parental neural responsivity to infants' visual attention: How mature brains influence immature brains during social interaction.

Authors:  Sam V Wass; Valdas Noreika; Stanimira Georgieva; Kaili Clackson; Laura Brightman; Rebecca Nutbrown; Lorena Santamaria Covarrubias; Vicky Leong
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2018-12-13       Impact factor: 8.029

7.  Gaze Following and Attention to Objects in Infants at Familial Risk for ASD.

Authors:  Janet P Parsons; Rachael Bedford; Emily J H Jones; Tony Charman; Mark H Johnson; Teodora Gliga
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8.  Do Helpful Mothers Help? Effects of Maternal Scaffolding and Infant Engagement on Cognitive Performance.

Authors:  Kaili Clackson; Sam Wass; Stanimira Georgieva; Laura Brightman; Rebecca Nutbrown; Harriet Almond; Julia Bieluczyk; Giulia Carro; Brier Rigby Dames; Victoria Leong
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9.  Hyper-Reactivity to Salience Limits Social Interaction Among Infants Born Pre-term and Infant Siblings of Children With ASD.

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10.  Dialogic Book-Sharing as a Privileged Intersubjective Space.

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