Infants' early visual attention and social engagement as developmental precursors to joint attention.
Brenda SalleyStephen J SheinkopfA Rebecca Neal-BeeversElena J TenenbaumCynthia L Miller-LoncarEd TronickLinda L LagasseSeetha ShankaranHenrietta BadaCharles BauerToni WhitakerJane HammondBarry M LesterPublished in: Developmental psychology (2017)
This study examined infants' early visual attention (at 1 month of age) and social engagement (4 months) as predictors of their later joint attention (12 and 18 months). The sample (n = 325), drawn from the Maternal Lifestyle Study, a longitudinal multicenter project conducted at 4 centers of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Neonatal Research Network, included high-risk (cocaine-exposed) and matched noncocaine-exposed infants. Hierarchical regressions revealed that infants' attention orienting at 1 month significantly predicted more frequent initiating joint attention at 12 (but not 18) months of age. Social engagement at 4 months predicted initiating joint attention at 18 months. Results provide the first empirical evidence for the role of visual attention and social engagement behaviors as developmental precursors for later joint attention outcome. (PsycINFO Database Record