One of the key transitions in early cognitive development is from participating in face-to-face interactions to engaging in joint attention exchanges. It is known that the ability to jointly attend with another person to an object is essential for the development of abilities such as language in later life. Strikingly, little is known about the function of joint attention in infants in the first year. We developed a novel interactive-live paradigm to assess the neural mechanisms of joint attention in 9-month-old infants. An adult interacted with each infant, and infants' electrical brain activity was measured in two contexts. In the joint attention context, a live adult gazed at the infants' face and then to a computer displayed novel objec...
Previous research suggests that by 4 months of age infants use the eye gaze of adults to guide their...
Do 5-month-old infants show differences in processing objects as a function of a prior interaction w...
Parents support and scaffold more mature behaviors in their infants. Recent research suggests that p...
One of the key transitions in early cognitive development is from participating in face-to-face inte...
One of the key transitions in early cognitive development is from participating in face-to-face inte...
Detecting when one’s own gaze has been followed is a critical component of joint attention, but litt...
Detecting when one's own gaze has been followed is a critical component of joint attention, but litt...
Social interactions are composed of coordinated, multimodal behaviors with each individual taking tu...
Almost all attention and learning—in particular, most early learning—take place in social settings. ...
Almost all attention and learning-in particular, most early learning-take place in social settings. ...
Joint attention, the shared attentional focus of at least two people on a third significant object, ...
The development of visual joint attention has been examined almost exclusively from the point of vie...
Abstract Joint attention develops during the first year of life but little is known about its effect...
The process by which two people share attention towards the same object or event is called joint att...
Almost all attention and learning-in particular, most early learning-take place in social settings. ...
Previous research suggests that by 4 months of age infants use the eye gaze of adults to guide their...
Do 5-month-old infants show differences in processing objects as a function of a prior interaction w...
Parents support and scaffold more mature behaviors in their infants. Recent research suggests that p...
One of the key transitions in early cognitive development is from participating in face-to-face inte...
One of the key transitions in early cognitive development is from participating in face-to-face inte...
Detecting when one’s own gaze has been followed is a critical component of joint attention, but litt...
Detecting when one's own gaze has been followed is a critical component of joint attention, but litt...
Social interactions are composed of coordinated, multimodal behaviors with each individual taking tu...
Almost all attention and learning—in particular, most early learning—take place in social settings. ...
Almost all attention and learning-in particular, most early learning-take place in social settings. ...
Joint attention, the shared attentional focus of at least two people on a third significant object, ...
The development of visual joint attention has been examined almost exclusively from the point of vie...
Abstract Joint attention develops during the first year of life but little is known about its effect...
The process by which two people share attention towards the same object or event is called joint att...
Almost all attention and learning-in particular, most early learning-take place in social settings. ...
Previous research suggests that by 4 months of age infants use the eye gaze of adults to guide their...
Do 5-month-old infants show differences in processing objects as a function of a prior interaction w...
Parents support and scaffold more mature behaviors in their infants. Recent research suggests that p...