Cross-cultural applicability of eye-tracking in assessing attention to emotional faces in preschool-aged children

Humans show an attention bias toward emotional versus neutral information, which is considered an adaptive pattern of information processing. Deviations from this pattern have been observed in children with socially withdrawn behaviors, with most research being conducted in controlled settings among...

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Published inEmotion (Washington, D.C.) Vol. 23; no. 5; p. 1385
Main Authors Nozadi, Sara S, Aguiar, Andrea, Du, Ruofei, Enright, Elizabeth A, Schantz, Susan L, Miller, Curtis, Rennie, Brandon, Quetawki, Mallery, MacKenzie, Debra, Lewis, Johnnye L
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.08.2023
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Abstract Humans show an attention bias toward emotional versus neutral information, which is considered an adaptive pattern of information processing. Deviations from this pattern have been observed in children with socially withdrawn behaviors, with most research being conducted in controlled settings among children from urban areas. The goal of the current study was to examine the cross-cultural applicability of two eye-tracking-based measures in assessing attention biases and their relations to children's symptoms of socially withdrawn behaviors in two independent and diverse samples of preschool children. The cross-cultural comparison was conducted between the Navajo Birth Cohort study (NBCS), an indigenous cohort with relatively low socioeconomic status (SES), and the Illinois Kids Development study (IKIDS), a primarily Non-Hispanic White and high SES cohort. Children in both cohorts completed eye-tracking tasks with pictures of emotional faces, and mothers reported on children's symptoms of socially withdrawn behaviors. Results showed that general patterns of attention biases were mostly the same across samples, reflecting heightened attention toward emotional versus neutral faces. The differences across two samples mostly involved the magnitude of attention biases. NBCS children were slower to disengage from happy faces when these emotional faces were paired with neutral faces. Additionally, socially withdrawn children in the NBCS sample showed a pattern of attentional avoidance for emotional faces. The comparability of overall patterns of attention biases provides initial support for the cross-cultural applicability of the eye-tracking measures and demonstrates the robustness of these methods across clinical and community settings. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
AbstractList Humans show an attention bias toward emotional versus neutral information, which is considered an adaptive pattern of information processing. Deviations from this pattern have been observed in children with socially withdrawn behaviors, with most research being conducted in controlled settings among children from urban areas. The goal of the current study was to examine the cross-cultural applicability of two eye-tracking-based measures in assessing attention biases and their relations to children's symptoms of socially withdrawn behaviors in two independent and diverse samples of preschool children. The cross-cultural comparison was conducted between the Navajo Birth Cohort study (NBCS), an indigenous cohort with relatively low socioeconomic status (SES), and the Illinois Kids Development study (IKIDS), a primarily Non-Hispanic White and high SES cohort. Children in both cohorts completed eye-tracking tasks with pictures of emotional faces, and mothers reported on children's symptoms of socially withdrawn behaviors. Results showed that general patterns of attention biases were mostly the same across samples, reflecting heightened attention toward emotional versus neutral faces. The differences across two samples mostly involved the magnitude of attention biases. NBCS children were slower to disengage from happy faces when these emotional faces were paired with neutral faces. Additionally, socially withdrawn children in the NBCS sample showed a pattern of attentional avoidance for emotional faces. The comparability of overall patterns of attention biases provides initial support for the cross-cultural applicability of the eye-tracking measures and demonstrates the robustness of these methods across clinical and community settings. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
Author Aguiar, Andrea
Quetawki, Mallery
Miller, Curtis
Lewis, Johnnye L
MacKenzie, Debra
Du, Ruofei
Schantz, Susan L
Enright, Elizabeth A
Rennie, Brandon
Nozadi, Sara S
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Snippet Humans show an attention bias toward emotional versus neutral information, which is considered an adaptive pattern of information processing. Deviations from...
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StartPage 1385
SubjectTerms Attentional Bias
Child, Preschool
Cohort Studies
Cross-Cultural Comparison
Emotions
Eye Movements
Eye-Tracking Technology
Facial Expression
Female
Humans
Title Cross-cultural applicability of eye-tracking in assessing attention to emotional faces in preschool-aged children
URI https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36107657
Volume 23
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