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Executive attention and self-regulation in infancy
Authors:Sheese Brad E  Rothbart Mary K  Posner Michael I  White Lauren K  Fraundorf Scott H
Institution:aDepartment of Psychology, Illinois Wesleyan University, Bloomington, IL, United States;bDepartment of Psychology, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR, United States;cDepartment of Human Development, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, United States;dDepartment of Psychology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Champaign, IL, United States
Abstract:This study investigates early executive attention in infancy by studying the relations between infant sequential looking and other behaviors predictive of later self-regulation. One early marker of executive attention development is anticipatory looking, the act of looking to the location of a target prior to its appearance in that location, a process that involves endogenous control of visual orienting. Previous studies have shown that anticipatory looking is positively related to executive attention as assessed by the ability to resolve spatial conflict in 3–4-year-old children. In the current study, anticipatory looking was positively related to cautious behavioral approach in response to non-threatening novel objects in 6- and 7-month-old infants. This finding and previous findings showing the presence of error detection in infancy are consistent with the hypothesis that there is some degree of executive attention in the first year of life. Anticipatory looking was also related to the frequency of distress, to looking away from disturbing stimuli, and to some self-regulatory behaviors. These results may indicate either early attentional regulation of emotion or close relations between early developing fear and later self-regulation. Overall, the results suggest the presence of rudimentary systems of executive attention in infants and support further studies using anticipatory looking as a measure of individual differences in attention in infancy.
Keywords:Attention  Self-regulation  Anticipatory looking  Object novelty  Emotion regulation  Infant
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