幼儿屏幕时间暴露与社会行为特征是否存在双向影响?

R. Aishworiya, I. Magiati, D. Phua, L. M. Daniel, L. Shek, Y. Chong, P. Gluckman, M. Meaney, E. Law
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引用次数: 4

摘要

本文在网站www.jdbp.org上有补充资料。摘要:目的:儿童早期屏幕时间与儿童亲社会技能和行为技能的关系;然而,这种关系的方向性尚不清楚。我们的目的是确定幼儿看屏幕时间、社交技能和非社会行为特征之间关系的方向。方法:这是一项基于人群的前瞻性队列研究,数据跨越5个时间点。我们研究了照顾者报告的儿童在12、18、24、36和54个月时的屏幕时间与12个月时使用婴幼儿社会情绪评估收集的社会行为之间的相互关系;18、24、36个月自闭症定量检查表;以及54个月时的社会反应量表。交叉滞后路径模型用于分析。结果:纳入了229名参与者的多重输入数据集和完整数据。12个月、18个月和36个月的屏幕时间预测了54个月时的非社会行为特征。交叉滞后路径模型显示,从较早时间点屏幕时间增加到较晚时间点社交技能和非典型行为较差的方向明显(赤池信息准则18936.55,贝叶斯信息准则19210.73,均方根误差近似为0.037,比较拟合指数0.943)。在任何时间点上,年轻时的社交技能或行为特征都不能预测以后的屏幕时间。结论:儿童早期屏幕时间对社会技能和非社会行为有滞后影响;没有发现相反的关系。在儿童早期过度使用屏幕的情况下,可能需要密切监测社会行为。
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Are There Bidirectional Influences Between Screen Time Exposure and Social Behavioral Traits in Young Children?
This article has supplementary material on the web site: www.jdbp.org. ABSTRACT: Objective: Screen time in early childhood has been associated with children's prosocial and behavioral skills; however, the directionality of this relationship is unclear. We aimed to determine the direction of the relationship between screen time, social skills, and nonsocial behavioral traits in young children. Methods: This was a population-based, prospective cohort study with data across 5 time points. We examined the reciprocal relationships between caregiver-reported children's screen time at 12, 18, 24, 36, and 54 months and social behaviors collected using the Infant-Toddler Social-Emotional Assessment at 12 months; the Quantitative Checklist for Autism at 18, 24, and 36 months; and the Social Responsiveness Scale at 54 months. Cross-lagged path models were used for analysis. Results: A multiple imputation data set and complete data from 229 participants were included in the analyses. Screen time at 12, 18, and 36 months predicted nonsocial behavioral traits at 54 months. Cross-lagged path models showed a clear direction from increased screen time at earlier time points to both poorer social skills and atypical behaviors at later time points (Akaike information criterion 18936.55, Bayesian information criterion 19210.73, root mean square error of approximation 0.037, and comparative fit index 0.943). Social skills or behavioral traits at a younger age did not predict later screen time at any of the time points. Conclusion: Screen time in early childhood has lagged influences on social skills and nonsocial behaviors; the reverse relationship is not found. Close monitoring of social behaviors may be warranted in the setting of excessive screen time during early childhood.
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