Controlling the input: How one‐year‐old infants sustain visual attention
Traditionally, the exogenous control of gaze by external saliencies and the endogenous control of gaze by knowledge and context have been viewed as competing systems, with late infancy seen as a period of strengthening top‐down control over the vagaries of the input. Here we found that one‐year‐old...
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| Published in: | Developmental science Vol. 27; no. 2; pp. e13445 - n/a |
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| Main Authors: | , , |
| Format: | Journal Article |
| Language: | English |
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01.03.2024
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| ISSN: | 1363-755X, 1467-7687, 1467-7687 |
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| Abstract | Traditionally, the exogenous control of gaze by external saliencies and the endogenous control of gaze by knowledge and context have been viewed as competing systems, with late infancy seen as a period of strengthening top‐down control over the vagaries of the input. Here we found that one‐year‐old infants control sustained attention through head movements that increase the visibility of the attended object. Freely moving one‐year‐old infants (n = 45) wore head‐mounted eye trackers and head motion sensors while exploring sets of toys of the same physical size. The visual size of the objects, a well‐documented salience, varied naturally with the infant's moment‐to‐moment posture and head movements. Sustained attention to an object was characterized by the tight control of head movements that created and then stabilized a visual size advantage for the attended object for sustained attention. The findings show collaboration between exogenous and endogenous attentional systems and suggest new hypotheses about the development of sustained visual attention. |
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| AbstractList | Traditionally, the exogenous control of gaze by external saliencies and the endogenous control of gaze by knowledge and context have been viewed as competing systems, with late infancy seen as a period of strengthening top-down control over the vagaries of the input. Here we found that one-year-old infants control sustained attention through head movements that increase the visibility of the attended object. Freely moving one-year-old infants (n=45) wore head-mounted eye trackers and head motion sensors while exploring sets of toys of the same physical size. The visual size of the objects, a well-documented salience, varied naturally with the infant’s moment-to-moment posture and head movements. Sustained attention to an object was characterized by the tight control of head movements that created and then stabilized a visual size advantage for the attended object for sustained attention. The findings show a collaboration between exogenous and endogenous attentional systems and suggest new hypotheses about the development of sustained visual attention. Traditionally, the exogenous control of gaze by external saliencies and the endogenous control of gaze by knowledge and context have been viewed as competing systems, with late infancy seen as a period of strengthening top-down control over the vagaries of the input. Here we found that one-year-old infants control sustained attention through head movements that increase the visibility of the attended object. Freely moving one-year-old infants (n = 45) wore head-mounted eye trackers and head motion sensors while exploring sets of toys of the same physical size. The visual size of the objects, a well-documented salience, varied naturally with the infant's moment-to-moment posture and head movements. Sustained attention to an object was characterized by the tight control of head movements that created and then stabilized a visual size advantage for the attended object for sustained attention. The findings show collaboration between exogenous and endogenous attentional systems and suggest new hypotheses about the development of sustained visual attention.Traditionally, the exogenous control of gaze by external saliencies and the endogenous control of gaze by knowledge and context have been viewed as competing systems, with late infancy seen as a period of strengthening top-down control over the vagaries of the input. Here we found that one-year-old infants control sustained attention through head movements that increase the visibility of the attended object. Freely moving one-year-old infants (n = 45) wore head-mounted eye trackers and head motion sensors while exploring sets of toys of the same physical size. The visual size of the objects, a well-documented salience, varied naturally with the infant's moment-to-moment posture and head movements. Sustained attention to an object was characterized by the tight control of head movements that created and then stabilized a visual size advantage for the attended object for sustained attention. The findings show collaboration between exogenous and endogenous attentional systems and suggest new hypotheses about the development of sustained visual attention. Traditionally, the exogenous control of gaze by external saliencies and the endogenous control of gaze by knowledge and context have been viewed as competing systems, with late infancy seen as a period of strengthening top‐down control over the vagaries of the input. Here we found that one‐year‐old infants control sustained attention through head movements that increase the visibility of the attended object. Freely moving one‐year‐old infants (n = 45) wore head‐mounted eye trackers and head motion sensors while exploring sets of toys of the same physical size. The visual size of the objects, a well‐documented salience, varied naturally with the infant's moment‐to‐moment posture and head movements. Sustained attention to an object was characterized by the tight control of head movements that created and then stabilized a visual size advantage for the attended object for sustained attention. The findings show collaboration between exogenous and endogenous attentional systems and suggest new hypotheses about the development of sustained visual attention. Traditionally, the exogenous control of gaze by external saliencies and the endogenous control of gaze by knowledge and context have been viewed as competing systems, with late infancy seen as a period of strengthening top‐down control over the vagaries of the input. Here we found that one‐year‐old infants control sustained attention through head movements that increase the visibility of the attended object. Freely moving one‐year‐old infants ( n = 45) wore head‐mounted eye trackers and head motion sensors while exploring sets of toys of the same physical size. The visual size of the objects, a well‐documented salience, varied naturally with the infant's moment‐to‐moment posture and head movements. Sustained attention to an object was characterized by the tight control of head movements that created and then stabilized a visual size advantage for the attended object for sustained attention. The findings show collaboration between exogenous and endogenous attentional systems and suggest new hypotheses about the development of sustained visual attention. Traditionally, the exogenous control of gaze by external saliencies and the endogenous control of gaze by knowledge and context have been viewed as competing systems, with late infancy seen as a period of strengthening top‐down control over the vagaries of the input. Here we found that one‐year‐old infants control sustained attention through head movements that increase the visibility of the attended object. Freely moving one‐year‐old infants (n = 45) wore head‐mounted eye trackers and head motion sensors while exploring sets of toys of the same physical size. The visual size of the objects, a well‐documented salience, varied naturally with the infant's moment‐to‐moment posture and head movements. Sustained attention to an object was characterized by the tight control of head movements that created and then stabilized a visual size advantage for the attended object for sustained attention. The findings show collaboration between exogenous and endogenous attentional systems and suggest new hypotheses about the development of sustained visual attention. |
| Author | Mendez, Andres H. Smith, Linda B. Yu, Chen |
| AuthorAffiliation | 2 Institut de Neurociencies, Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain 3 Department of Psychology, University of Texas, Austin TX USA 4 Psychological and Brain Sciences, Indiana Unversity, Bloomington Indiana, USA 1 CICEA, Universidad de la República, Montevideo, Uruguay |
| AuthorAffiliation_xml | – name: 3 Department of Psychology, University of Texas, Austin TX USA – name: 2 Institut de Neurociencies, Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain – name: 4 Psychological and Brain Sciences, Indiana Unversity, Bloomington Indiana, USA – name: 1 CICEA, Universidad de la República, Montevideo, Uruguay |
| Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Andres H. surname: Mendez fullname: Mendez, Andres H. organization: Universitat de Barcelona – sequence: 2 givenname: Chen surname: Yu fullname: Yu, Chen organization: University of Texas – sequence: 3 givenname: Linda B. orcidid: 0000-0001-7163-8181 surname: Smith fullname: Smith, Linda B. email: smith4@iu.edu organization: Indiana Unversity |
| BackLink | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37665124$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed |
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| CitedBy_id | crossref_primary_10_1016_j_infbeh_2025_102135 crossref_primary_10_1093_cercor_bhaf087 crossref_primary_10_1111_infa_70033 crossref_primary_10_1073_pnas_2414636122 crossref_primary_10_1111_infa_70043 crossref_primary_10_1080_13506285_2025_2468690 crossref_primary_10_3390_bs15050576 |
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| Keywords | salience infancy top-down control sustained attention |
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| Title | Controlling the input: How one‐year‐old infants sustain visual attention |
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