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Infant-parent coordination during play is an important facilitator of the development of language, attention, and social cognition. Although the dynamics of triadic interaction in the second year of life are well documented, less is known about how infants and parents coordinate attention earlier in development. Prior work has shown that pre-sitting infants often play facing away from their parents, making visual access to faces difficult. However, it is not yet known whether and how this might affect their ability to coordinate attention to objects. Twenty 5- to 7-month-old infants (10 sitters, 10 nonsitters; 11 girls; nine Hispanic/Latino) were observed while they played with a parent in two conditions: sitting on the floor and sitting in a supportive infant seat. Infants and parents wore head-mounted eye trackers to record their visual attention, and their manual actions were coded from video. In the seat, parents always placed their infants facing toward them, but when sitting on the floor, parents frequently placed their infants facing away to provide manual support from behind. Surprisingly, coordination of attention was not disrupted, but facilitated, when infants faced away from their parents. This was likely due to greater rates of hand-eye coordination for both infants and parents while facing away, which strengthened the validity of the "hand-following" pathway to coordinated attention. Therefore, infants and parents can maintain high degrees of coordination during play without being able to see each other's faces. This phenomenon may have implications for developmental trends in infant attention throughout the first year of life. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/dev0002067 | DOI Listing |
PLoS One
September 2025
Department of Health Sciences, University of York, York, United Kingdom.
Background: Previous studies have shown associations between specific limiting longstanding illnesses and mental health difficulties using cross-sectional studies in the UK. This study explored the association between having any limiting longstanding illness and serious psychological distress or of currently receiving treatment for depression or serious anxiety at age 17 years.
Methods: A secondary analysis of the UK Millennium Cohort Study was conducted.
PLoS One
September 2025
Department of Medicine, Al-Quds University, Jerusalem, Palestine.
Background: Undernutrition remains a persistent public health concern among young children in Palestine, shaped by a range of socioeconomic and dietary factors. This study applies a Structural Equation Modeling (SEM) approach to explore both direct and indirect determinants of child growth among children aged 6-59 months in the West Bank.
Methods: Data were drawn from a 2022 cross-sectional survey involving 300 children selected from 1,400 households.
JMIR Res Protoc
September 2025
Department of Development & Environmental Studies, Palacký University Olomouc, Olomouc, Czech Republic.
Background: Children in low- and middle-income countries face obstacles to optimal language and cognitive development due to a variety of factors related to adverse socioeconomic conditions. One of these factors is compromised caregiver-child interactions and associated pressures on parenting. Early development interventions, such as dialogic book-sharing (DBS), address this variable, with evidence from both high-income countries and urban areas of low- and middle-income countries showing that such interventions enhance caregiver-child interaction and the associated benefits for child cognitive and socioemotional development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCureus
August 2025
Division of Neonatology, Center for Maternal-Neonatal Care, Nagoya University Hospital, Nagoya, JPN.
This case report describes the implementation of Family-Centered Care (FCC) and developmental occupational therapy (OT) for an extremely preterm infant born at 22 weeks and one day of gestation, weighing 448 g. The infant experienced multiple complications, including necrotizing enterocolitis, sepsis, intraventricular hemorrhage, and respiratory distress, requiring prolonged intensive care. Due to physiological fragility and immature neurobehavior, a structured rehabilitation approach was introduced, integrating OT and caregiver participation based on FCC principles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Neurosci
September 2025
Department of Pediatrics, Advanced Pediatrics Centre, Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh, India.
Background: Children with chronic kidney disease (CKD) are at risk of inferior neurocognitive outcomes. As the brain develops rapidly during the early years of life, we wanted to find out the impact of CKD on neurocognition when it occurs during this time and any disease-associated risk factors.
Methods: A cross-sectional case-control study was conducted in the Paediatric Nephrology Clinic, PGIMER, Chandigarh.