ERIC Number: EJ1226133
Record Type: Journal
Publication Date: 2019-Sep
Pages: 17
Abstractor: As Provided
ISBN: N/A
ISSN: EISSN-1467-7687
EISSN: N/A
Early Development of Visual Attention in Infants in Rural Malawi
Developmental Science, v22 n5 e12761 Sep 2019
Eye tracking research has shown that infants develop a repertoire of attentional capacities during the first year. The majority of studies examining the early development of attention comes from Western, high-resource countries. We examined visual attention in a heterogeneous sample of infants in rural Malawi (N = 312-376, depending on analysis). Infants were assessed with eye-tracking-based tests that targeted visual orienting, anticipatory looking, and attention to faces at 7 and 9 months. Consistent with prior research, infants exhibited active visual search for salient visual targets, anticipatory saccades to predictable events, and a robust attentional bias for happy and fearful faces. Individual variations in these processes had low to moderate odd-even split-half and test-retest reliability. There were no consistent associations between attention measures and gestational age, nutritional status, or characteristics of the rearing environment (i.e., maternal cognition, psychosocial well-being, socioeconomic status, and care practices). The results replicate infants' early attentional biases in a large, unique sample, and suggest that some of these biases (e.g., bias for faces) are pronounced in low-resource settings. The results provided no evidence that the initial manifestation of infants' attentional capacities is associated with risk factors that are common in low-resource environments.
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Infant Behavior, Attention, Rural Areas, Infants, Individual Differences, Nonverbal Communication, Human Body, Foreign Countries, Nutrition, Well Being, Mothers, Parent Child Relationship, Socioeconomic Status, Low Income, Risk, Correlation, Child Development
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Publication Type: Journal Articles; Reports - Research
Education Level: N/A
Audience: N/A
Language: English
Sponsor: USAID, Bureau for Global Health
Authoring Institution: N/A
Identifiers - Location: Malawi
Grant or Contract Numbers: AIDOAAA1200005