Title: Looking and Visual Attention: Overview and Developmental Framework
1Looking and Visual AttentionOverview and
Developmental Framework
2Goals of this chapter
- Provide a broad outline of issues to be discussed
in more detail in the following chapters. - Cast these issues in a framework of early
development - Emphasize four major developmental transitions
- These transitions are important in understanding
the two major attention systems - Earlier maturing system
- orienting and investigation of locations and
objects - Later maturing system
- goal oriented attention and the control of
complex activity.
3Looking in newborn
- First two month of life only 11-19 alert
- Neither random nor confused organized and
selective - Select looking preferences
- patterned stimulation gt plain fields of color.
- Patterns composed of curved gt straight lines.
- Figure3.1 Infant tend to look more at patterns
and objects that have large features and high
contrast . - Scanning
- Able to track moving objects although not
smooth and lag - Selectively look at moving prototypical human
faces. - Figure3.2 tend to scan the external contours of
stationary objects, and restrict their scanning
to small sections of the contours. - Disengage attention
- Have trouble looking away from a highly salient
object once their attention has been engaged.
4The transition at 2-3 months
- Spend much time awake and looking around.
- Select
- After 2 Mo more likely to select particular
object, regardless of whether they are larger or
brighter.figure3.3 - Scanning
- 2-3Mo visually follow objects more readily
- Include the internal as well as the external
contours and more widely distributed. Figure3.2 - After 3Mo obligatory looking seems to diminish
and infants begin to disengage their looking more
readily. - The time infants spend looking at interesting
objects during alert periods increases from birth
to 3 months Figure3.4
5Social implications of the 2-to 3-Mo shift
- Face to face play
- Before 2 Mo, some times fail to establish eye
contact , often looking to the hairline or the
edge of the face.(2 Mo 24of the time - dull) - after 2 Mo, more like to make eye contact, thus
to select and invite the social partner to
interact. (3 Mo dull looking drop to 8) - The duration of social looking increases over the
first few months, as it does for static
patterns.Figure3.4 - The long obligatory looking of the infant into
the eyes of the parent might be seen by the
parent as a sign of attachment.figure3.5 - 6months
- The transition marks
- The development of attachment
- Mutual regulation of attention in face to face
interaction.
6Processes underlying the transition at 2 to 3
Months
- See better because the maturation of the visual
system (Retina) - Maturation of cells and connections in the visual
pathway to the cortex change the basis for
discrimination and selecting among object. - 2Movisual orienting and attention are governed
by different processes - Newbornsubcortical mechanism
- 2-3Moshift to cortical control
- Visual orienting or selecting begin to be
determined more by attention (begin to coordinate
with attention) - More details , see ch4,5(selectivity) and
ch6(state)
7Looking and the development of the first
attention system
- 3-9Mo
- deploy their attention more flexibly and are
influenced more readily by experience. figure3.6 - Learn to visually recognize more complex events
than younger infants. - Attention shift from primary involvement with the
parent to the world of objects - 5 Mo begin to reach grasp, and manipulate
objects that engage their visual attention - 9 Mo highly proficient at manipulative , visual
exploration of novel objects - Share attention important for both social and
cognitive development. - The incorporation of objects into social
interactions promotes shared attention to
objects.
8Looking and the development of the first
attention system-2
- First attention system composed by
- Orienting network where
- Supported by a network in the posterior parietal
cortex in conjunction with several subcortical
systems. - Involves a number of processes disengagement,
shifting , and inhibition of return. - Object recognition network what
- Involves the pathway from the primary visual
cortex to the inferior temporal cortex. - These two networks development in different rates
- parietal orienting network maturing before
temporal Object recognition network. - The coordination of these two networks supports
the functioning of the orienting/investigative
system.
9The transition at 9 to 12 months -Developmental
change in looking
- Static displays decrease Figure3.6,Figure3.7
- Part due to faster learning and habituation.
- Manipulative play with toys/objects
- Single object --older infants looks less, but
Complex object --older infants look longer. - Several objects increase. Figure3.8
- Important social implication changes
- social referencing visual reference their
parents when they encounter ambiguous situations. - occurs at the same time-- fear of strangers
some behavior inhibition to novelty or challenge. - Share attention share attention to toys/objects
with adults. - between 9-12Mo, more likely to comply with
mothers instruction, imitate mothers actions,
attract mother to a toy of their chossing.
10The transition at 9 to 12 months -Changes in
other domains
- Development of memory and action control (such
as crawling ). - 9Mo -delay imitate others action ,Solve simple
means-ends problems. - 12Mo-solve means-ends problems consisting of
several steps. (need to despite delay and
obstacle to attend the goal) - Emerging intentionality of action as goals are
kept briefly in mind, and employ a variety of
means to attain them. - The infant is now developing a mind of its own
11Process underlying the transition around 9 months
- Emerging motor skill crawling
- Infants attend to new aspects of both the
physical and social environment - New advances in memory and cognition
- When looking at objects discrepant from their
experience, Ex.Figure3.9 - Young infant look only long enough to recognize
that and object is part of an already experienced
category of events. - Older infant begin to generate hypotheses about
what they see, especially when current displays
conflict with previous experiences. - Figure3.7,duration of looking increasesbecause
more aware of the discrepancies, and attempt to
resolve or understand that. - Emergence of some inhibition of actions that are
strongly or immediately elicited by the
situation. - A not B errornot simply fail to remember the
correct location, but fail to inhibit the primed
response. - Development of dorsolateral prefrontal cortex .
- Success of A not B error
12Consolidation of the second attention system and
the transition at 18 months
- Developments in patterns of looking
- Looking at complex visual displaysincrease
Figure3.10 - looking during play with toys continues to
increase after 12Mo, Figure3.11 - Figure3.7 ,Figure3.11 Strongly suggests a direct
relationship between age and how long visual
attention is sustained. - By the end of first begin to combine objects,
and more and more complex. - 18-24Mo
- Language comprehension is sufficient to
understand when others use words to direct their
attention. - Skilled at following the glances and points of
others. - Use all these sources as information and as
motivation to shift the direction of their
looking. - Control the selectivity of others by pointing and
vocalizing themselves, and by checking to see
whether other people are following their lead.
13The 18 month Transition
- Increase in comprehension and complexity of
activity could be seen as a gradual accumulation
of skills that influence visual attention. - Qualitative changes may underlie the emergence of
new attentional skills not observable in looking
alone. - Naming spurt a sharp increase in labeling object
- Piaget(1952) links the development of language to
the underlying emergence of symbolic functioning. - Pretend play
- Has some capacity to represent absent objects and
events - Better able to anticipate future consequences and
to plan ahead. - Self- referential ability
- Identify themselves in mirror images, have a
sense of self - Begin to take pleasure in producing particular
out comes for themselves (Ex. putting a puzzle
together) - Have a greater awareness of the extent to which
of their own behavior meets external standards.
14Processes underlying the 18 month transition
- The ability to anticipate outcomes means that
anticipations can influence action. - We now see greater inhibitory control over
current and future action by symbolic and
specifically linguistic means. - The frontal cortex is undergoing further
development in the 18-24 month period. - Performance on tasks of delayed nonmatching
improves dramatically between 18-21Mo - Must learn only novel object are rewarded, and
must inhibit a natural tendency to respond to the
previously reinforced object - Overman(1990) inferior prefrontal cortex is
important to this task. - The ability to act on the basis of represented,
rather than present, information, such as verbal
instruction from self or others , may be related
to the maturation of other parts of the frontal
cortex - The frontal cortex is a complicated system with
components that mature at different rates. - Continuing maturation new experiences the
emergence of new forms of motivationleads to
further changes in the second attention system
during the preschool years.
15The preschool and increasing control of attention
- 2-5 y/o
- Consolidation of skills and gradual accumulation
of knowledge. - Improved ability to plan ahead ,engage in complex
activity - Change in motivation and enhanced self- control
- Behavioral evidence
- Levy(1980)
- Press button, when x appeared in a stream of
letters. - 27 of 3-3.5 y/o, 100 of 4.5 y/o can comply
with all of the trials. - Need to control their looking and regulating
behavior on demand. - Ruff(1995), table 3.1
16Processes underlying development from 2 5 years
- maturation of the frontal cortex.
- Important for inhibition of motor activity,
organization of complex and sequential activity. - 4 y/o transition
- Increases in inhibitory control (Reed..,1984)
- Table3.1,3.5-4.5y/o looking away, response time
,errors of omission all improved from 40-85 - Change in attentional and behavioral control
- The vigilance network involving right frontal
pathway - Important point in neurological development
- Synaptic connections in some frontal areas reach
a peak between 3-5y/o
17summary
- 2-3Mo
- obligatory attention-gtmore sensitive to novelty
- Looking at station display
- 0-3Mo-gt increase
- 3-12Mo-gtdecrease
- 5-12M-objcet add into social interaction
- 9-12Mo
- The development of dorsolateral prefrontal
cortex, memory, action - development of intentionthe emergence of the
second attention system. - 18-24Mo
- Development of representation, language,
symbolic, sense of self. - Plan ahead, modulate their behavior in accordance
with plan. - 4y/o
- Voluntarily direct attention to present task,
regulate action, inhibit response to perceptually
salient. - Inhibit action on instruction from self or
others.
18The end of chapter 3
19Figure3.1
20Figure3.2
1Mo
2Mo
21Figure 3.3
- First 2Mo, looking at the ?
- Bigger brighter
- After 2Mo, looking at the small area.
22Figure 3.4
- Dashed line face, checker-board, and other
high-contrast patterns. - Solid line looking at adult during interaction.
- Duration of looking time Increasing with age.
23Figure 3.5
24Figure 3.6
- during familiarization and habituation.
- liner decrease in the amount of looking devoted
to visual displays. - Possibly because learn such displays more and
more quickly
25Figure 3.7
- Solid squares and crosses.
- Lewis(1969)
- Flashing lights slides of colored curved line
segments. - Asterisks
- Kagan(1971)
- Three dimensional faces.
- 3-13Mosteady decrease in looking
- The dip in looking and the subsequent increase
are due to these advances in memory and
cognition.
26Figure 3.8
- Ruff et(1993)
- 97Mo floor play 5 mins
- 9Mo looking at toysgt7Mo
- Bakeman(1984)
- 6-18Mo home floor play 10 mins
- Looking at toys increasing with age.
27Figure 3.9
28Figure 3.10
- TV watching
- Aserisks
- Ruff(1989)
- 2.5-4.5 y/o
- Home
- video tape of puppet skits.
- Crosses
- Anderson(1976)
- 12-48Mo
- lab
- Sesame Street
- Looking duration increase with age
29Figure3.11
- Squares
- Ruff(1990)
- 30-54Mo
- 10 mins free play
- 30-42 Mo looking time increase
- asterisks
- Krakow(1982)
- 12-30 Mo
- 6 mins free play with toys
- Looking time increase
- Overall level of looking high!!!
- a situation or set of toys that would always lead
to more attention 2y/o than 4y/o,
30Table 3.1
- PSFP
- largest difference on 2.5-3.5y/o
- focused attention (double)
- RT task
- largest difference on 3.5-4.5y/o
- looking away, omissions, away from taskdecrease
with age - Motivation like please the adult or achieve
self-imposed standard become import. - All situation
- Less physically active