Infant-directed song potentiates infants' selective attention to adults' mouths over the first year of life.

TitleInfant-directed song potentiates infants' selective attention to adults' mouths over the first year of life.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2022
AuthorsAlviar C, Sahoo M, Edwards LA, Jones W, Klin A, Lense M
JournalDev Sci
Paginatione13359
Date Published2022 Dec 17
ISSN1467-7687
Abstract

The mechanisms by which infant-directed (ID) speech and song support language development in infancy are poorly understood, with most prior investigations focused on the auditory components of these signals. However, the visual components of ID communication are also of fundamental importance for language learning: over the first year of life, infants' visual attention to caregivers' faces during ID speech switches from a focus on the eyes to a focus on the mouth, which provides synchronous visual cues that support speech and language development. Caregivers' facial displays during ID song are highly effective for sustaining infants' attention. Here we investigate if ID song specifically enhances infants' attention to caregivers' mouths. 299 typically developing infants watched clips of female actors engaging them with ID song and speech longitudinally at six time points from 3 to 12 months of age while eye-tracking data was collected. Infants' mouth-looking significantly increased over the first year of life with a significantly greater increase during ID song versus speech. This difference was early-emerging (evident in the first 6 months of age) and sustained over the first year. Follow-up analyses indicated specific properties inherent to ID song (e.g., slower tempo, reduced rhythmic variability) in part contribute to infants' increased mouth-looking, with effects increasing with age. The exaggerated and expressive facial features that naturally accompany ID song may make it a particularly effective context for modulating infants' visual attention and supporting speech and language development in both typically developing infants and those with or at risk for communication challenges. RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS: Infants' visual attention to adults' mouths during infant-directed speech has been found to support speech and language development. Infant-directed (ID) song promotes mouth-looking by infants to a greater extent than does ID speech across the first year of life. Features characteristic of ID song such as slower tempo, increased rhythmicity, increased audiovisual synchrony, and increased positive affect, all increase infants' attention to the mouth. The effects of song on infants' attention to the mouth are more prominent during the second half of the first year of life.

DOI10.1111/desc.13359
Alternate JournalDev Sci
PubMed ID36527322
Grant ListR21DC016710 / DC / NIDCD NIH HHS / United States
R00HD097290 / HD / NICHD NIH HHS / United States
P50MH100029 / MH / NIMH NIH HHS / United States
R61 MH123029 / MH / NIMH NIH HHS / United States