Sustained looking at faces at 5 months of age is associated with socio‐communicative skills in the second year of life

Author:

Viktorsson Charlotte1ORCID,Portugal Ana Maria12,Taylor Mark J.3,Ronald Angelica4,Falck‐Ytter Terje125

Affiliation:

1. Development and Neurodiversity Lab Department of Psychology Uppsala University Uppsala Sweden

2. Center of Neurodevelopmental Disorders (KIND) Division of Neuropsychiatry Department of Women's and Children's Health Karolinska Institutet Stockholm Sweden

3. Department of Medical Epidemiology & Biostatistics Karolinska Institutet Stockholm Sweden

4. School of Psychology Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences University of Surrey Surrey UK

5. Swedish Collegium for Advanced Study Uppsala Sweden

Abstract

AbstractEfficiently processing information from faces in infancy is foundational for nonverbal communication. We studied individual differences in 5‐month‐old infants' (N = 517) sustained attention to faces and preference for emotional faces. We assessed the contribution of genetic and environmental influences to individual differences in these gaze behaviors, and the association between these traits and other concurrent and later phenotypes. We found an association between the mean duration of looking at a face (before looking away from it) at 5 months and socio‐communicative abilities at 14 months (β = 0.17, 95% CI: 0.08; 0.26, p < 0.001). Sustained attention to faces predicted socio‐communicative abilities over and above variance captured by mean fixation duration. We also found a statistically significant but weak tendency to prefer looking at smiling faces (relative to neutral faces), but no indication that variability in this behavior was explained by genetic effects. Moderate heritability was found for sustained attention to faces (A = 0.23, CI: 0.06; 0.38), while shared environmental influences were non‐significant for both phenotypes. These findings suggest that sustained looking at individual faces before looking away is a developmentally significant ‘social attention’ phenotype in infancy, characterized by moderate heritability and a specific relation to later socio‐communicative abilities.

Funder

Knut och Alice Wallenbergs Stiftelse

Stiftelsen Sunnerdahls Handikappfond

Riksbankens Jubileumsfond

Innovative Medicines Initiative

HORIZON EUROPE Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions

Publisher

Wiley

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