How do infants learn to communicate with the people around
them nonverbally, through eye contact? Researchers have some new insight into
this silent form of communication from an unlikely source: the sighted children
of blind parents. "Infants of blind parents allocated less attention to
adults' eye gaze," says Atsushi Senju of Birkbeck, University of London.
"It suggests that infants are actively learning from communicating with
their parents and adjusting how best to interact with them." Senju says
it's important to note that those infants developed typical overall social
communication abilities, suggesting that the patterns of difference the
researchers observed were limited specifically to the babies' attention to
adults' eye gaze.
Researchers used
eye-tracking technology to assess face scanning and gaze following in 14
sighted infants of blind parents at 6 to 10 months and then again at 12 to 16
months of age. They also watched as the infants interacted with their blind
parent and with an unfamiliar sighted adult. In comparison to a group of
infants with sighted parents, infants whose parents were blind paid less
attention to adults' eyes, the researchers report. The children with blind
parents were otherwise typical in their development. In fact, in some ways,
they even excelled.
"Infants of blind parents showed advanced visual
attention and memory skills when they are 8 months old, which we did not expect
when we started this project," Senju says. He says it's possible that the
need to switch communication modes between blind parents and other sighted
adults might boost infants' early development of visual attention and memory. Senju
says they don't yet know how long lasting the differences in the infants born
to blind parents will be. It's possible they might diminish as children
interact more with peers and other sighted adults. They are now following up
these children at the age of three to study their longer-term development. In
the near future, they also want to explore development in another interesting
group of babies--the hearing infants of deaf parents.
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