11 results on '"Leppänen, Jukka M."'
Search Results
2. Associations between individual variations in visual attention at 9 months and behavioral competencies at 18 months in rural Malawi.
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Pyykkö, Juha, Ashorn, Ulla, Chilora, Eletina, Maleta, Kenneth, Ashorn, Per, and Leppänen, Jukka M.
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EYE tracking ,EYE examination ,COGNITIVE analysis ,INDIVIDUAL differences - Abstract
Theoretical and empirical considerations suggest that individual differences in infant visual attention correlate with variations in cognitive skills later in childhood. Here we tested this hypothesis in infants from rural Malawi (n = 198–377, depending on analysis), who were assessed with eye tracking tests of visual orienting, anticipatory looks, and attention to faces at 9 months, and more conventional tests of cognitive control (A-not-B), motor, language, and socioemotional development at 18 months. The results showed no associations between measures of infant attention at 9 months and cognitive skills at 18 months, either in analyses linking infant visual orienting with broad cognitive outcomes or analyses linking specific constructs between the two time points (i.e., switching of anticipatory looks and manual reaching responses), as correlations varied between -0.08 and 0.14. Measures of physical growth, and family socioeconomic characteristics were also not correlated with cognitive outcomes at 18 months in the current sample (correlations between -0.10 and 0.19). The results do not support the use of the current tests of infant visual attention as a predictive tool for 18-month-old infants' cognitive skills in the Malawian setting. The results are discussed in light of the potential limitations of the employed infant tests as well as potentially unique characteristics of early cognitive development in low-resource settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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3. Associations Between Neonatal Cry Acoustics and Visual Attention During the First Year.
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Kivinummi, Aicha, Naithani, Gaurav, Tammela, Outi, Virtanen, Tuomas, Kurkela, Enni, Alhainen, Miia, Niehaus, Dana J. H., Lachman, Anusha, Leppänen, Jukka M., and Peltola, Mikko J.
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EYE tracking ,VISUAL perception ,ACOUSTICS ,COGNITIVE development ,ATTENTION - Abstract
It has been suggested that early cry parameters are connected to later cognitive abilities. The present study is the first to investigate whether the acoustic features of infant cry are associated with cognitive development already during the first year, as measured by oculomotor orienting and attention disengagement. Cry sounds for acoustic analyses (fundamental frequency; F0) were recorded in two neonatal cohorts at the age of 0–8 days (Tampere, Finland) or at 6 weeks (Cape Town, South Africa). Eye tracking was used to measure oculomotor orienting to peripheral visual stimuli and attention disengagement from central stimuli at 8 months (Tampere) or at 6 months (Cape Town) of age. Only a marginal positive correlation between fundamental frequency of cry (F0) and visual attention disengagement was observed in the Tampere cohort, but not in the Cape Town cohort. This correlation indicated that infants from the Tampere cohort with a higher neonatal F0 were marginally slower to shift their gaze away from the central stimulus to the peripheral stimulus. No associations between F0 and oculomotor orienting were observed in either cohort. We discuss possible factors influencing the current pattern of results suggesting a lack of replicable associations between neonatal cry and visual attention and suggest directions for future research investigating the potential of early cry analysis in predicting later cognitive development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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4. Eye-tracking-based assessment of cognitive function in low-resource settings.
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Forssman, Linda, Ashorn, Per, Ashorn, Ulla, Maleta, Kenneth, Matchado, Andrew, Kortekangas, Emma, and Leppänen, Jukka M.
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EYE tracking ,COGNITIVE ability ,PUBLIC health ,MEDICAL education ,MEDICAL economics ,ANTHROPOMETRY ,COGNITION ,COMPARATIVE studies ,EYE movements ,HEALTH attitudes ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MEDICALLY underserved areas ,PSYCHOLOGY of mothers ,SENSORY perception ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,PILOT projects ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,EVALUATION research ,EYE movement measurements - Abstract
Background: Early development of neurocognitive functions in infants can be compromised by poverty, malnutrition and lack of adequate stimulation. Optimal management of neurodevelopmental problems in infants requires assessment tools that can be used early in life, and are objective and applicable across economic, cultural and educational settings.Objective and Design: The present study examined the feasibility of infrared eye tracking as a novel and highly automated technique for assessing visual-orienting and sequence-learning abilities as well as attention to facial expressions in young (9-month-old) infants. Techniques piloted in a high-resource laboratory setting in Finland (N=39) were subsequently field-tested in a community health centre in rural Malawi (N=40).Results: Parents' perception of the acceptability of the method (Finland 95%, Malawi 92%) and percentages of infants completing the whole eye-tracking test (Finland 95%, Malawi 90%) were high, and percentages of valid test trials (Finland 69-85%, Malawi 68-73%) satisfactory at both sites. Test completion rates were slightly higher for eye tracking (90%) than traditional observational tests (87%) in Malawi. The predicted response pattern indicative of specific cognitive function was replicated in Malawi, but Malawian infants exhibited lower response rates and slower processing speed across tasks.Conclusions: High test completion rates and the replication of the predicted test patterns in a novel environment in Malawi support the feasibility of eye tracking as a technique for assessing infant development in low-resource setting. Further research is needed to the test-retest stability and predictive validity of the eye-tracking scores in low-income settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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5. Using Eye Tracking to Understand Infants' Attentional Bias for Faces.
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Leppänen, Jukka M.
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ATTENTIONAL bias , *COGNITIVE bias , *ATTENTION , *COGNITION , *MEMORY bias , *INFANT psychology , *INFANT development - Abstract
Infants have a natural tendency to look at adults' faces, possibly to help initiate vital interactions with caregivers during sensitive periods of development. Recent studies using eye-tracking technologies have identified the mechanisms that underlie infants' capacity to orient and hold attention on faces. These studies have shown that the bias for faces is weak in young infants, but becomes more robust and resistant to distraction during the second half of the 1st year. This development is apparently related to more general changes in infants' attention and control of eye movement. As a tractable and reproducible aspect of infant behavior, the attention bias for faces can be used to examine the neural correlates of attention and may be a way to monitor early neurodevelopment in infants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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6. Attention to Faces Expressing Negative Emotion at 7 Months Predicts Attachment Security at 14 Months.
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Peltola, Mikko J., Forssman, Linda, Puura, Kaija, IJzendoorn, Marinus H., and Leppänen, Jukka M.
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FACE perception in infants ,FACIAL expression ,ATTACHMENT behavior in infants ,EYE tracking ,FEAR ,SECURITY (Psychology) in children ,SENSITIVITY (Personality trait) - Abstract
To investigate potential infant-related antecedents characterizing later attachment security, this study tested whether attention to facial expressions, assessed with an eye-tracking paradigm at 7 months of age ( N = 73), predicted infant-mother attachment in the Strange Situation Procedure at 14 months. Attention to fearful faces at 7 months predicted attachment security, with a smaller attentional bias to fearful expressions associated with insecure attachment. Attachment disorganization in particular was linked to an absence of the age-typical attentional bias to fear. These data provide the first evidence linking infants' attentional bias to negative facial expressions with attachment formation and suggest reduced sensitivity to facial expressions of negative emotion as a testable trait that could link attachment disorganization with later behavioral outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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7. Newborn left amygdala volume associates with attention disengagement from fearful faces at eight months.
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Tuulari, Jetro J., Kataja, Eeva-Leena, Leppänen, Jukka M., Lewis, John D., Nolvi, Saara, Häikiö, Tuomo, Lehtola, Satu J., Hashempour, Niloofar, Saunavaara, Jani, Scheinin, Noora M., Korja, Riikka, Karlsson, Linnea, and Karlsson, Hasse
- Abstract
• After 5 months of age, infants begin to prioritize attention to fearful over other facial expressions. • Amygdala and related early-maturing subcortical network, is important for emergence of this attentional bias. • Left amygdala volume associates positively with the emerging perceptual vigilance for fearful faces during infancy. • possible link from the prenatally defined variability in the amygdala size to social traits After 5 months of age, infants begin to prioritize attention to fearful over other facial expressions. One key proposition is that amygdala and related early-maturing subcortical network, is important for emergence of this attentional bias – however, empirical data to support these assertions are lacking. In this prospective longitudinal study, we measured amygdala volumes from MR images in 65 healthy neonates at 2–5 weeks of gestation corrected age and attention disengagement from fearful vs. non-fearful facial expressions at 8 months with eye tracking. Overall, infants were less likely to disengage from fearful than happy/neutral faces, demonstrating an age-typical bias for fear. Left, but not right, amygdala volume (corrected for intracranial volume) was positively associated with the likelihood of disengaging attention from fearful faces to a salient lateral distractor (r =.302, p =.014). No association was observed with the disengagement from neutral or happy faces in equivalent conditions (r =.166 and.125, p =.186 and.320, respectively). These results are the first to link the amygdala volume with the emerging perceptual vigilance for fearful faces during infancy. They suggest a link from the prenatally defined variability in the amygdala size to early postnatal emotional and social traits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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8. The role of TPH2 variant rs4570625 in shaping infant attention to social signals.
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Kataja, Eeva-Leena, Leppänen, Jukka M., Kantojärvi, Katri, Pelto, Juho, Häikiö, Tuomo, Korja, Riikka, Nolvi, Saara, Karlsson, Hasse, Paunio, Tiina, and Karlsson, Linnea
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MENTAL depression , *GENOTYPE-environment interaction , *AGE differences , *EYE tracking , *ANXIETY - Abstract
TPH2, the rate-limiting enzyme in the synthesis of serotonin, has been connected to several psychiatric outcomes. Its allelic variant, rs4570625, has been found to relate to individual differences in cognitive and emotion regulation during infancy with T-carriers of rs4570625 showing a relatively heightened attention bias for fearful faces. A significant gene-environment interaction was also reported with the T-carriers of mothers with depressive symptoms showing the highest fear bias. We investigated these associations in a sample of 8-month old infants (N = 330), whose mothers were prescreened for low/high levels of prenatal depressive and/or anxiety symptoms. Attention disengagement from emotional faces (neutral, happy, fearful, and phase-scrambled control faces) to distractors was assessed with eye tracking and an overlap paradigm. Maternal depressive symptoms were assessed at several time points during pregnancy and postpartum. The mean levels of symptoms at six months postpartum and the trajectories of symptoms from early pregnancy until six months postpartum were used in the analyses (N = 274). No main effect of the rs4570625 genotype on attention disengagement was found. The difference in fear bias between the genotypes was significant but in an opposite direction compared to a previous study. The results regarding the interaction of the genotype and maternal depression were not in accordance with the previous studies. These results show inconsistencies in the effects of the rs4570625 genotype on attention biases in separate samples of infants from the same population with only slight differences in age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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9. Cross-cultural analysis of attention disengagement times supports the dissociation of faces and patterns in the infant brain.
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Pyykkö, Juha, Ashorn, Per, Ashorn, Ulla, Niehaus, Dana J. H., and Leppänen, Jukka M.
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BRAIN physiology ,EYE tracking ,POPULATION ,PATTERN perception ,CROSS-cultural studies - Abstract
Infants are slower to disengage from faces than non-face patterns when distracted by novel competing stimuli. While this perceptual predilection for faces is well documented, its universality and mechanisms in relation to other aspects of attention are poorly understood. We analysed attention disengagement times for faces and non-face patterns in a large sample of 6-to 9-month-old infants (N = 637), pooled from eye tracking studies in socioculturally diverse settings (Finland, Malawi, South Africa). Disengagement times were classified into distinct groups of quick and delayed/censored responses by unsupervised clustering. Delayed disengagement was frequent for faces (52.1% of trials), but almost negligible for patterns (3.9% of trials) in all populations. The magnitude of this attentional bias varied by individuals, whereas the impact of situational factors and facial expression was small. Individual variations in disengagement from faces were moderately stable within testing sessions and independent from variations in disengagement times for patterns. These results point to a fundamental dissociation of face and pattern processing in infants and demonstrate that the bias for faces can be robust against distractors and habituation. The results raise the possibility that attention to faces varies as an independent, early-emerging social trait in populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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10. Early development of visual attention in infants in rural Malawi.
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Pyykkö, Juha, Forssman, Linda, Maleta, Kenneth, Ashorn, Per, Ashorn, Ulla, and Leppänen, Jukka M.
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INFANTS ,ATTENTIONAL bias ,EYE tracking ,GESTATIONAL age ,STATISTICAL reliability - Abstract
Eye tracking research has shown that infants develop a repertoire of attentional capacities during the first year. The majority of studies examining the early development of attention comes from Western, high‐resource countries. We examined visual attention in a heterogeneous sample of infants in rural Malawi (N = 312–376, depending on analysis). Infants were assessed with eye‐tracking‐based tests that targeted visual orienting, anticipatory looking, and attention to faces at 7 and 9 months. Consistent with prior research, infants exhibited active visual search for salient visual targets, anticipatory saccades to predictable events, and a robust attentional bias for happy and fearful faces. Individual variations in these processes had low to moderate odd‐even split‐half and test‐retest reliability. There were no consistent associations between attention measures and gestational age, nutritional status, or characteristics of the rearing environment (i.e., maternal cognition, psychosocial well‐being, socioeconomic status, and care practices). The results replicate infants' early attentional biases in a large, unique sample, and suggest that some of these biases (e.g., bias for faces) are pronounced in low‐resource settings. The results provided no evidence that the initial manifestation of infants' attentional capacities is associated with risk factors that are common in low‐resource environments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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11. The Stability of Early Developing Attentional Bias for Faces and Fear From 8 to 30 and 60 Months in the Finn-Brain Birth Cohort Study.
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Kataja, Eeva-Leena, Eskola, Eeva, Pelto, Juho, Korja, Riikka, Paija, Sasu-Petteri, Nolvi, Saara, Häikiö, Tuomo, Karlsson, Linnea, Karlsson, Hasse, and Leppänen, Jukka M.
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POSITIVE psychology , *CHILD care , *CHILD development , *FACIAL expression , *FEAR , *COGNITION , *INDIVIDUALITY , *CHILD behavior , *MENTAL health , *COMPARATIVE studies , *FACE , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PSYCHOLOGICAL disengagement , *ATTENTIONAL bias , *LONGITUDINAL method , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Most infants exhibit an attentional bias for faces and fearful facial expressions. These biases reduce toward the third year of life, but little is known about the development of the biases beyond early childhood. We used the same methodology longitudinally to assess attention disengagement patterns from nonface control pictures and faces (neutral, happy, and fearful expressions) in a large sample of children at 8, 30, and 60 months (N = 389/393/492, respectively; N = 72 for data in all three assessment; girls > 45.3% in each assessment). "Face bias" was measured as a difference in disengagement probability (DP) from faces (neutral/happy) versus nonface patterns. "Fear bias" was calculated as a difference in DP for fearful versus happy/neutral faces. At group level, DPs followed a nonlinear longitudinal trajectory in all face conditions, being lowest at 8 months, highest at 30 months, and intermediate at 60 months. Face bias declined between 8 and 30 months, but did not change between 30 and 60 months. Fear bias declined linearly from 8 to 60 months. Individual differences in disengagement were generally not stable across age, but weak correlations were found in face bias between 8- and 60-month, and in DPs between 30- and 60-month (rs = .22-.41). The results suggest that prioritized attention to faces--that is, a hallmark of infant cognition and a key aspect of human social behavior--follows a nonlinear trajectory in early childhood and may have only weak continuity from infancy to mid childhood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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