Look at Grandma! Joint visual attention over video chat during the COVID-19 pandemic

IF 1.9 3区 心理学 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL Infant Behavior & Development Pub Date : 2024-03-12 DOI:10.1016/j.infbeh.2024.101934
Lauren J. Myers , Gabrielle A. Strouse , Elisabeth R. McClure , Krystyna R. Keller , Lucinda I. Neely , Isabella Stoto , Nithya S. Vadakattu , Erin D. Kim , Georgene L. Troseth , Rachel Barr , Jennifer M. Zosh
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Abstract

Social interactions are crucial for many aspects of development. One developmentally important milestone is joint visual attention (JVA), or shared attention between child and adult on an object, person, or event. Adults support infants’ development of JVA by structuring the input they receive, with the goal of infants learning to use JVA to communicate. When family members are separated from the infants in their lives, video chat sessions between children and distant relatives allow for shared back-and-forth turn taking interaction across the screen, but JVA is complicated by screen mediation. During video chat, when a participant is looking or pointing at the screen to something in the other person’s environment, there is no line of sight that can be followed to their object of focus. Sensitive caregivers in the remote and local environment with the infant may be able to structure interactions to support infants in using JVA to communicate across screens. We observed naturalistic video chat interactions longitudinally from 50 triads (infant, co-viewing parent, remote grandmother). Longitudinal growth models showed that JVA rate changes with child age (4 to 20 months). Furthermore, grandmother sensitivity predicted JVA rate and infant attention. More complex sessions (sessions involving more people, those with a greater proportion of across-screen JVA, and those where infants initiated more of the JVA) resulted in lower amounts of JVA-per-minute, and evidence of family-level individual differences emerged in all models. We discuss the potential of video chat to enhance communication for separated families in the digital world.

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看看奶奶COVID-19 大流行期间视频聊天中的共同视觉注意力
社会交往对人的多方面发展至关重要。其中一个重要的发展里程碑是联合视觉注意(JVA),即儿童和成人共同注意一个物体、人或事件。成人通过安排婴儿接收的信息来支持他们发展联合视觉注意,目的是让婴儿学会使用联合视觉注意进行交流。当家庭成员与生活中的婴儿分离时,儿童与远方亲戚之间的视频聊天会话可以让他们在屏幕上进行共享的来回轮流互动,但 JVA 因屏幕中介而变得复杂。在视频聊天过程中,当参与者注视或指向屏幕上对方环境中的某物时,没有视线可以追随到他们关注的对象。与婴儿一起处于远程和本地环境中的敏感照护者可能会安排互动,以支持婴儿使用 JVA 进行跨屏交流。我们纵向观察了 50 个三元组(婴儿、共同观看的父母、远方的祖母)的自然视频聊天互动。纵向成长模型显示,JVA 率随着儿童年龄(4 到 20 个月)的变化而变化。此外,祖母的敏感性也能预测JVA率和婴儿的注意力。更复杂的会话(涉及更多人的会话、有更大比例的跨屏 JVA 的会话、婴儿发起更多 JVA 的会话)导致每分钟的 JVA 量降低,所有模型中都出现了家庭层面的个体差异证据。我们讨论了视频聊天在数字世界中加强离散家庭沟通的潜力。
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来源期刊
Infant Behavior & Development
Infant Behavior & Development PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL-
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
4.80%
发文量
94
期刊介绍: Infant Behavior & Development publishes empirical (fundamental and clinical), theoretical, methodological and review papers. Brief reports dealing with behavioral development during infancy (up to 3 years) will also be considered. Papers of an inter- and multidisciplinary nature, for example neuroscience, non-linear dynamics and modelling approaches, are particularly encouraged. Areas covered by the journal include cognitive development, emotional development, perception, perception-action coupling, motor development and socialisation.
期刊最新文献
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