Infants' early learning is fast and efficient. Most research on infant learning from social contexts has focused on child-directed activities, such as toy play. However, learning in everyday contexts may not be limited to child-directed activities. Routines at home consist of other activities, such as meal preparation, laundry, and chores, that may still offer learning opportunities for infants. But infants can only learn from these moments if they are paying attention. Here, we provide the first examination of infant attention during non-child-directed everyday activity. In a home-like laboratory environment, parents prepared peanut butter and jelly sandwiches in front of infants who sat in a highchair across from them, as they might every day at home. Head-mounted eye trackers were used to record gaze data from infants, which was then temporally aligned with parent actions to measure infants' attention to the task. Our findings reveal that, despite the presence of a room full of distractors, infants most often focused on task-related objects. Although infants only tracked parents' actions for 40% of the session, they prioritized looking at parents' more complex actions and looked equally at parents' actions and the objects they themselves were engaged with. In addition, when parents were more engaged with their infants (e.g., looking at them and talking to them), infants paid more attention. These findings indicate that infants are attuned to the routines and activities of daily life and that parental engagement can play a critical role in enhancing this attention. This suggests that even routine tasks, often overlooked as learning opportunities, can be transformed into valuable moments for development. By examining how infants allocate their attention in naturalistic settings, we can better understand the role of everyday experiences in early learning and explore how parents can optimize these moments to support their infants' growth. SUMMARY: Head-mounted eye tracking captured real-time infant gaze during non-child-directed meal preparation in a home-like laboratory setting. Infants attended primarily to task-relevant objects and actions, even amid numerous visual distractions. Infants prioritized observing parents' complex, effect-producing actions over simple object handling. Everyday routines may serve as rich, natural input supporting infants' observational learning.
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Kaplan et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a75d3fc6e9836116a26f1a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/desc.70141
Brianna E. Kaplan
The University of Texas at Austin
Claire Monroy
Keele University
Chen Yu
The University of Texas at Austin
Developmental Science
The University of Texas at Austin
Keele University
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