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Multimodal exploration of objects during toy play is important for a child's development and is suggested to be abnormal in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) due to either atypical attention or atypical action. However, little is known about how children with ASD coordinate their visual attention and manual actions during toy play. The current study aims to understand if and in what ways children with ASD generate exploratory behaviors to toys in natural, unconstrained contexts by utilizing head-mounted eye tracking to quantify moment-by-moment attention. We found no differences in how 24- to 48-mo children with and without ASD distribute their visual attention, generate manual action, or coordinate their visual and manual behaviors during toy play with a parent. Our findings suggest an intact ability and willingness of children with ASD to explore toys and suggest that context is important when studying child behavior.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-81102-0 | DOI Listing |
J Pediatr Nurs
August 2025
Firat University, Health Sciences Institute, Elazığ, Turkey; Firat University, Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Pediatric Nursing, Elazığ, Turkey. Electronic address:
Purpose: The aim of this study was to determine the effects of therapeutic play on the fear and anxiety levels and behaviours of children receiving high-flow nasal cannula oxygen therapy.
Design And Method: This study was conducted as a pre-test - post-test randomized controlled study. The study was conducted in the Paediatric Intensive Care Unit of a state hospital located in a province of the Central Anatolia Region of Turkey between June and December 2024.
Infancy
August 2025
The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas, USA.
To learn a word from an everyday context, infants need to be able to link the heard word with the correct object perceived. A prevailing view of the early learning environment is that infants' world is bombarded with objects and words. Therefore, it is difficult to find the named object from many possible candidates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Neurosci
August 2025
Department of Functioning and Disability, Institute for Developmental Research, Aichi Developmental Disability Center, Kasugai, 480-0392, Japan.
Change-related brain responses are specifically elicited when the regularity of a continuous sensory stimulus is disrupted and are recorded by electroencephalography or magnetoencephalography. These responses are one of the higher brain functions representing memory-based comparison processes between the current and previous sensory states. The present study aimed to record change-related visual evoked potentials in children aged 6-10 years.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
July 2025
Department of Psychology, University of California, Los Angeles, CA.
Animals in the wild must balance multiple, potentially mutually-exclusive goals simultaneously in order to survive. Yet laboratory tests of decision making often investigate how animals optimize their behavior to achieve a single, well-defined goal, which is often a nutritive reward. Thus, how animals solve multi-objective optimization problems is not well understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCogn Sci
August 2025
Department of Psychology, The University of Texas at Austin.
Learning the meaning of a verb is challenging because learners need to resolve two types of ambiguity: (1) word-referent mapping-finding the correct referent event of a verb, and (2) word-meaning mapping-inferring the correct meaning of the verb from the referent event (e.g., whether the meaning of an action word is TURNING or TWISTING).
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