The cascading development of visual attention in infancy: Learning to look and looking to learn

Curr Dir Psychol Sci. 2023 Oct;32(5):410-417. doi: 10.1177/09637214231178744. Epub 2023 Jul 4.

Abstract

The development of visual attention in infancy is typically indexed by where and how long infants look, focusing on changes in alerting, orienting, or attentional control. However, visual attention and looking are both complex systems that are multiply determined. Moreover, infants' visual attention, looking, and learning are intimately connected. Infants learn to look, reflecting cascading effects of changes in attention, the visual system and motor control, as well as the information infants learn about the world around them. Furthermore infants' looking behavior provides the input infants use to perceive and learn about the world. Thus, infants look to learn about the world around them. A deeper understanding of development will be gained by appreciating the cascading effects of changes across these intertwined domains.

Keywords: Infancy; developmental cascades; learning; looking; visual attention.