Evidence for Attentional Phenotypes in Infancy and Their Role in Visual Cognitive Performance

Infant visual attention rapidly develops during the first year of life, playing a pivotal role in the way infants process, learn, and respond to their visual world. It is possible that individual differences in eye movement patterns shape early experience and thus subsequent cognitive development. I...

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Main Authors: Shannon Ross-Sheehy, Esther Reynolds, Bret Eschman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-09-01
Series:Brain Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3425/10/9/605
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spelling doaj-6b275af97c92465a849bcc95e9071b532020-11-25T03:18:51ZengMDPI AGBrain Sciences2076-34252020-09-011060560510.3390/brainsci10090605Evidence for Attentional Phenotypes in Infancy and Their Role in Visual Cognitive PerformanceShannon Ross-Sheehy0Esther Reynolds1Bret Eschman2Department of Psychology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996, USADepartment of Psychology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996, USADepartment of Psychology, Florida International University, Miami, FL 33199, USAInfant visual attention rapidly develops during the first year of life, playing a pivotal role in the way infants process, learn, and respond to their visual world. It is possible that individual differences in eye movement patterns shape early experience and thus subsequent cognitive development. If this is the case, then it may be possible to identify sub-optimal attentional behaviors in infancy, before the emergence of cognitive deficit. In Experiment 1, a latent profile analysis was conducted on scores derived from the Infant Orienting with Attention (IOWA) task, a cued-attention task that measures individual differences in spatial attention and orienting proficiency. This analysis identified three profiles that varied substantially in terms of attentional efficiency. The largest of these profiles (“high flexible”, 55%) demonstrated functionally optimal patterns of attentional functioning with relatively rapid, selective, and adaptive orienting responses. The next largest group (“low reactive”, 39.6%) demonstrated low attentional sensitivity with slow, insensitive orienting responses. The smallest group (“high reactive”, 5.4%) demonstrated attentional over-sensitivity, with rapid, unselective and inaccurate orienting responses. A linear mixed effect model and growth curve analysis conducted on 5- to 11-month-old eye tracking data revealed significant stable differences in growth trajectory for each phenotype group. Results from Experiment 2 demonstrated the ability of attentional phenotypes to explain individual differences in general cognitive functioning, revealing significant between-phenotype group differences in performance on a visual short-term memory task. Taken together, results presented here demonstrate that attentional phenotypes are present early in life and predict unique patterns of growth from 5 to 11 months, and may be useful in understanding the origin of individual differences in general visuo-cognitive functioning.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3425/10/9/605infant attentionvisual orientingsaccadesinfant developmentcognitive developmentvisual attention
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shannon Ross-Sheehy
Esther Reynolds
Bret Eschman
spellingShingle Shannon Ross-Sheehy
Esther Reynolds
Bret Eschman
Evidence for Attentional Phenotypes in Infancy and Their Role in Visual Cognitive Performance
Brain Sciences
infant attention
visual orienting
saccades
infant development
cognitive development
visual attention
author_facet Shannon Ross-Sheehy
Esther Reynolds
Bret Eschman
author_sort Shannon Ross-Sheehy
title Evidence for Attentional Phenotypes in Infancy and Their Role in Visual Cognitive Performance
title_short Evidence for Attentional Phenotypes in Infancy and Their Role in Visual Cognitive Performance
title_full Evidence for Attentional Phenotypes in Infancy and Their Role in Visual Cognitive Performance
title_fullStr Evidence for Attentional Phenotypes in Infancy and Their Role in Visual Cognitive Performance
title_full_unstemmed Evidence for Attentional Phenotypes in Infancy and Their Role in Visual Cognitive Performance
title_sort evidence for attentional phenotypes in infancy and their role in visual cognitive performance
publisher MDPI AG
series Brain Sciences
issn 2076-3425
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Infant visual attention rapidly develops during the first year of life, playing a pivotal role in the way infants process, learn, and respond to their visual world. It is possible that individual differences in eye movement patterns shape early experience and thus subsequent cognitive development. If this is the case, then it may be possible to identify sub-optimal attentional behaviors in infancy, before the emergence of cognitive deficit. In Experiment 1, a latent profile analysis was conducted on scores derived from the Infant Orienting with Attention (IOWA) task, a cued-attention task that measures individual differences in spatial attention and orienting proficiency. This analysis identified three profiles that varied substantially in terms of attentional efficiency. The largest of these profiles (“high flexible”, 55%) demonstrated functionally optimal patterns of attentional functioning with relatively rapid, selective, and adaptive orienting responses. The next largest group (“low reactive”, 39.6%) demonstrated low attentional sensitivity with slow, insensitive orienting responses. The smallest group (“high reactive”, 5.4%) demonstrated attentional over-sensitivity, with rapid, unselective and inaccurate orienting responses. A linear mixed effect model and growth curve analysis conducted on 5- to 11-month-old eye tracking data revealed significant stable differences in growth trajectory for each phenotype group. Results from Experiment 2 demonstrated the ability of attentional phenotypes to explain individual differences in general cognitive functioning, revealing significant between-phenotype group differences in performance on a visual short-term memory task. Taken together, results presented here demonstrate that attentional phenotypes are present early in life and predict unique patterns of growth from 5 to 11 months, and may be useful in understanding the origin of individual differences in general visuo-cognitive functioning.
topic infant attention
visual orienting
saccades
infant development
cognitive development
visual attention
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3425/10/9/605
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