Identifying when children with visual impairment share attention: A novel protocol and the impact of visual acuity
•Sharing attention is challenging for infants with visual impairment (VI).•Sharing attention measures assume normal vision limiting research in infants with VI.•A novel measure tailored to infants with VI obtained good inter-coder reliability.•Infants with VI, who have enough residual vision, use ga...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Infant behavior & development 2021-08, Vol.64, p.101585, Article 101585 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Sharing attention is challenging for infants with visual impairment (VI).•Sharing attention measures assume normal vision limiting research in infants with VI.•A novel measure tailored to infants with VI obtained good inter-coder reliability.•Infants with VI, who have enough residual vision, use gaze to share attention with others.•The lower an infant’s visual acuity, the lower his/her ability to share attention.
In Coordinated Joint Engagement (CJE), children acknowledge that they and their social partners are paying attention to the same object. The achievement of CJE, critical for healthy development, is at risk in infants with visual impairment (VI). Research on CJE in these children is limited because investigators use a child’s gaze switch between social partner and object to index CJE. Research is needed that identifies CJE in children with VI using behaviors that do not require normal vision and that explores the relationship between CJE and visual function. This study aimed to (a) develop a protocol for identifying CJE in children with VI, and (b) explore the relationship between CJE and infants’ visual acuity (VA) and contrast sensitivity (CS), measured with Preferential Looking (PL) techniques and Visual Evoked Potential (VEP).
A protocol that included 9 indices of CJE that did not require normal vision was developed to code videos of 20 infants with VI (mean age =1 year, 6 months, 27 days) and their caregivers. The percentage of CJE episodes in which each index was observed was calculated. Inter-coder reliability was measured using Cohen’s Kappa. Linear regression analysis was used to examine the relationship between the infants’ visual function and CJE.
Inter-rater reliability between a first coder and each of two second coders were 0.98 and 0.90 for determining whether the child participated in CJE. The following indices were observed the most (in 43–62 % of CJE): child’s body orientation to caregiver, gaze switch between caregiver and object, and vocalization to caregiver. The only significant model included VA (measured with PL) as a single predictor and explained 26.8 % of the variance in CJE.
The novel protocol can be used to identify CJE in children with VI with good inter-coder reliability. The data suggest that children with lower VA exhibited less CJE. |
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ISSN: | 0163-6383 1879-0453 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.infbeh.2021.101585 |