Infant embodied attention in context: Feasibility of home-based head-mounted eye tracking in early infancy
Social communication emerges from dynamic, embodied social interactions during which infants coordinate attention to caregivers and objects. Yet many studies of infant attention are constrained to a laboratory setting, neglecting how attention is nested within social contexts where caregivers dynami...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Developmental cognitive neuroscience 2023-12, Vol.64, p.101299, Article 101299 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Social communication emerges from dynamic, embodied social interactions during which infants coordinate attention to caregivers and objects. Yet many studies of infant attention are constrained to a laboratory setting, neglecting how attention is nested within social contexts where caregivers dynamically scaffold infant behavior in real time. This study evaluates the feasibility and acceptability of the novel use of head-mounted eye tracking (HMET) in the home with N = 40 infants aged 4 and 8 months who are typically developing and at an elevated genetic liability for autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Results suggest that HMET with young infants with limited independent motor abilities and at an elevated likelihood for atypical development is highly feasible and deemed acceptable by caregivers. Feasibility and acceptability did not differ by age or ASD likelihood. Data quality was also acceptable, albeit with younger infants showing slightly lower accuracy, allowing for preliminary analysis of developmental trends in infant gaze behavior. This study provides new evidence for the feasibility of using in-home HMET with young infants during a critical developmental period when more complex interactions with the environment and social partners are emerging. Future research can apply this technology to illuminate atypical developmental trajectories of embodied social attention in infancy.
•Infant social attention and behavior are nested within an embodied context.•Home-based, head-mounted eye tracking (HMET) with infants as young as 4 months is feasible.•Feasibility and acceptability of HMET does not differ for infants at elevated likelihood for autism.•HMET can quantify developmental shifts in infant gaze patterns between 4 and 8 months of age in the context of infant-caregiver interactions. |
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ISSN: | 1878-9293 1878-9307 1878-9307 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.dcn.2023.101299 |