Affiliation:
1. Graduate School of Humanities and Social Sciences Nagoya City University Nagoya Japan
2. Department of Nursing, Faculty of Health Sciences Komatsu University Komatsu Japan
3. Faculty of Education Gifu Shotoku Gakuen University Gifu Japan
4. Pediatric Department Japanese Red Cross Nagoya Daini Hospital Nagoya Japan
5. Nagoya Western Care Center for Disabled Children Nagoya Japan
Abstract
AbstractAimTo investigate whether rightward attention to the mouth during audiovisual speech perception may be a behavioural marker for early brain development, we studied very preterm and low birthweight (VLBW) and typically developing (TD) toddlers.MethodsWe tested the distribution of gaze points in Japanese‐learning TD and VLBW toddlers when exposed to talking, silent and mouth moving faces at 12, 18 and 24 months (corrected age). Each participant was categorised based upon the area they gazed at most (Eye‐Right, Eye‐Left, Mouth‐Right, Mouth‐Left) per stimulus per age. A log‐linear model was applied to three‐dimensional contingency tables (region, side and group).ResultsVLBW toddlers showed fewer gaze points than TD toddlers. At 12 months, more VLBW toddlers than TD toddlers showed left attentional bias toward any one face; however, this difference in attention asymmetry receded somewhat by 24 months. In talking condition, TD toddlers showed right attentional bias from 12 to 24 months, whereas VLBW toddlers showed such bias upon reaching 24 months. Additionally, more TD toddlers than VLBW toddlers attended to the mouth.ConclusionDelays in exhibiting the attentional bias for an audiovisual face or general faces displayed by typically developing children might suggest differential developmental timing for hemispheric specialisation or dominance.
Subject
General Medicine,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
Cited by
1 articles.
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