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Individual differences in visual attention and self-regulation: A multimethod longitudinal study from infancy to toddlerhood

Authors :
Geeraerts, Sanne B.
Hessels, Roy S.
Van Der Stigchel, Stefan
Huijding, Jorg
Endendijk, Joyce J.
Van Den Boomen, Carlijn
Kemner, Chantal
Deković, Maja
Social and personality development: A transactional approach
Development and Treatment of Psychosocial Problems
Experimental Psychology (onderzoeksprogramma PF)
Helmholtz Institute
Afd Psychologische functieleer
Leerstoel Branje
Leerstoel Dekovic
Leerstoel Kemner
Leerstoel Stigchel
Leerstoel Baar
Adolescent development: Characteristics and determinants
Social and personality development: A transactional approach
Development and Treatment of Psychosocial Problems
Experimental Psychology (onderzoeksprogramma PF)
Helmholtz Institute
Afd Psychologische functieleer
Leerstoel Branje
Leerstoel Dekovic
Leerstoel Kemner
Leerstoel Stigchel
Leerstoel Baar
Adolescent development: Characteristics and determinants
Source :
Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 180, 104. Academic Press Inc.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Given the importance of self-regulation for a broad range of developmental outcomes, identifying reliable precursors of self-regulation early in development is important for early prevention of developmental problems. The aim of this study was to examine whether three visual attention measures (fixation duration, variation in fixation duration, and disengagement) in infancy (9.10–11.43 months of age) predicted effortful control and compliance in toddlerhood (26.71–31.80 months). The sample consisted of 74 children (50% boys). In infancy, two eye-tracking tasks were conducted: a visual search task to assess fixation duration and variation in fixation duration (n = 58) and the gap–overlap task to assess disengagement (n = 49). In toddlerhood, children’s effortful control (n = 65) and compliance (n = 65) were assessed by parent reports and observed during a delay of gratification task and a cleanup session together with the parents, respectively. Using full information maximum likelihood to account for missing data, multiple regression analyses revealed that, when all three measures of visual attention were taken into account, longer fixations and less variation in fixation duration in infancy predicted better effortful control. Disengagement did not predict effortful control. Compliance in toddlerhood was not predicted by any of the visual attention measures. These findings may indicate that visual attentional measures in infancy predict relatively independent forms of self-regulation in toddlerhood. Future studies are necessary to elucidate the mechanisms that underlie the association between (variation in) fixation duration in infancy and effortful control in toddlerhood.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00220965
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 180, 104. Academic Press Inc.
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5277f7f9d8d3084f5cca3697d5e5c723