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Pilot study investigating infant vagal reactivity and visual behavior during object perception. Am J Occup Ther 2008;62(2):198-205

Date

04/09/2008

Pubmed ID

18390013

DOI

10.5014/ajot.62.2.198

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-42449148412 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   6 Citations

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The authors examined whether changes in vagal tone were related to infant visual attention during auditory and visual events paired (synchronous) and not paired (asynchronous) in time. They predicted that infants would demonstrate greater visual attention to the synchronous slideshow and that vagal tone would decrease with visual attention.

METHOD: Nineteen infants, 3.5 months old, watched computer-generated synchronous or asynchronous slideshows of auditory and visual stimuli. Visual behavior and vagal tone data were collected. Vagal tone reflects physiological responses during attention or exposure to mild stressors. Repeated-measures analysis of variance examined differences in vagal tone across conditions.

RESULTS: Visual behavior did not differ between the synchronous and asynchronous slideshow conditions. Vagal tone was significantly lower during the asynchronous slideshow.

CONCLUSION: Infants may discriminate synchronous from asynchronous stimuli without changing visual behavior. Implications related to play with toys or objects are discussed.

Author List

Pizur-Barnekow K, Kraemer GW, Winters JM

Author

Kris Barnekow PhD Associate Professor in the Occupational Science and Technology department at University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee




MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Analysis of Variance
Female
Heart Rate
Humans
Infant
Male
Pilot Projects
Psychological Tests
Time Factors
Vagus Nerve
Visual Perception