Association For Child And Adolescent Mental Health (acamh)

Preferential looking to eyes versus mouth in early infancy

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Synopsis

DOI: 10.13056/acamh.23462 In this Papers Podcast, Charlotte Viktorsson, a PhD student at the Development and Neurodiversity Lab, Department of Psychology, Uppsala University, Sweden, discusses her JCPP paper ‘Preferential looking to eyes versus mouth in early infancy: heritability and link to concurrent and later development’ (doi.org/10.1111/jcpp.13724). Charlotte is the first author of the paper. There is an overview of the paper, methodology, key findings, and implications for practice. Discussion points include; Why it is important to establish the relative role of genetic and environmental influences on eye preference relative to mouth preference in early infancy. What are the implications of what infants look at being largely based on their individual genotype, before they can select their environment by means of crawling or walking. Preference for eyes at 5 months was positively correlated with parent’s assessment of vocabulary at 14 months. No significant association was found between mouth or