Assessing the effects of engagement with maternal ostensive signals in infants with neurodevelopmental risk

Background. Social ostensive signals, such as gaze, gaze following, calling the infant’s name, gesture and smile, are communicative cues commonly observed during interactions between infants and caregivers to indicate intent to interact or convey information. While extensive research has document...

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Main Author: Teo, Joan Wei Ling
Other Authors: Victoria Leong
Format: Thesis-Master by Research
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2024
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/181789
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1817892024-12-22T15:32:31Z Assessing the effects of engagement with maternal ostensive signals in infants with neurodevelopmental risk Teo, Joan Wei Ling Victoria Leong School of Social Sciences VictoriaLeong@ntu.edu.sg Social Sciences Ostensive signals Executive functions Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) Preterm birth Background. Social ostensive signals, such as gaze, gaze following, calling the infant’s name, gesture and smile, are communicative cues commonly observed during interactions between infants and caregivers to indicate intent to interact or convey information. While extensive research has documented how ostensive signals promote infants’ cognitive development specifically in learning, language and social skills, the effects of these signals on infants with atypical neurodevelopmental trajectories remains unclear. Furthermore, there is limited understanding on whether engaging in ostensive signals provides any indication of or contributes to the development of executive functions (EF) such as working memory, inhibitory control and cognitive flexibility. Research Questions. Therefore, this study aims to explore two main research questions regarding the roles of ostensive signals in early childhood. Firstly, the present study aims to characterise atypicality in processing ostensive signals, by studying differences between infants at risk of neurodevelopmental disorders and a typically developing cohort. Secondly, the study aims to understand how mother-infant ostensive signal exchanges influence the infant’s EF development and how that relationship differs between typically developing infants and familial risk of ASD infants. Methods. By observing mother-infant social engagement during a toy searching, Anot- B task (n=51), this study explores how ostensive signals may influence the development of EF in infants with varying neurodevelopmental risk. Specifically, the impact of ostensive signals on the following EF components (in an early emergent form) is examined: working memory (the ability to recall a hiding location), inhibitory control (the ability to resist reaching toward a previously rewarded location), and cognitive flexibility (the capacity to adapt to new rules or changes). Infants' performance was assessed through measures of reaction time and accuracy. Results. The findings indicate significant differences in the engagement of ostensive signals in preterm and ASD-at-risk infants with their mothers, as compared to typically developing infants. Additionally, the association between ostensive signals and emerging EF skills varied across infants with different neurodevelopmental risk. Typically developing infants who initiated more ostensive signals, also demonstrated shorter reaction times when making a correct response. However, preterm and ASD-at-risk infants had longer reaction times when they initiated more ostensive signals. Attending to maternal cues was associated with longer reaction time for the correct responses among typically developing and preterm infants. On the other hand, ASD-at-risk infants showed shorter reaction times when they responded to more maternal cues, especially mother’s gesture. Significance Statement. These findings suggest that engagement with ostensive signals has nuanced effects on performance in EF tasks in infants. While these signals can positively Master's degree 2024-12-19T11:06:43Z 2024-12-19T11:06:43Z 2024 Thesis-Master by Research Teo, J. W. L. (2024). Assessing the effects of engagement with maternal ostensive signals in infants with neurodevelopmental risk. Master's thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/181789 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/181789 en IRB-2023-034 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social Sciences
Ostensive signals
Executive functions
Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)
Preterm birth
spellingShingle Social Sciences
Ostensive signals
Executive functions
Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)
Preterm birth
Teo, Joan Wei Ling
Assessing the effects of engagement with maternal ostensive signals in infants with neurodevelopmental risk
description Background. Social ostensive signals, such as gaze, gaze following, calling the infant’s name, gesture and smile, are communicative cues commonly observed during interactions between infants and caregivers to indicate intent to interact or convey information. While extensive research has documented how ostensive signals promote infants’ cognitive development specifically in learning, language and social skills, the effects of these signals on infants with atypical neurodevelopmental trajectories remains unclear. Furthermore, there is limited understanding on whether engaging in ostensive signals provides any indication of or contributes to the development of executive functions (EF) such as working memory, inhibitory control and cognitive flexibility. Research Questions. Therefore, this study aims to explore two main research questions regarding the roles of ostensive signals in early childhood. Firstly, the present study aims to characterise atypicality in processing ostensive signals, by studying differences between infants at risk of neurodevelopmental disorders and a typically developing cohort. Secondly, the study aims to understand how mother-infant ostensive signal exchanges influence the infant’s EF development and how that relationship differs between typically developing infants and familial risk of ASD infants. Methods. By observing mother-infant social engagement during a toy searching, Anot- B task (n=51), this study explores how ostensive signals may influence the development of EF in infants with varying neurodevelopmental risk. Specifically, the impact of ostensive signals on the following EF components (in an early emergent form) is examined: working memory (the ability to recall a hiding location), inhibitory control (the ability to resist reaching toward a previously rewarded location), and cognitive flexibility (the capacity to adapt to new rules or changes). Infants' performance was assessed through measures of reaction time and accuracy. Results. The findings indicate significant differences in the engagement of ostensive signals in preterm and ASD-at-risk infants with their mothers, as compared to typically developing infants. Additionally, the association between ostensive signals and emerging EF skills varied across infants with different neurodevelopmental risk. Typically developing infants who initiated more ostensive signals, also demonstrated shorter reaction times when making a correct response. However, preterm and ASD-at-risk infants had longer reaction times when they initiated more ostensive signals. Attending to maternal cues was associated with longer reaction time for the correct responses among typically developing and preterm infants. On the other hand, ASD-at-risk infants showed shorter reaction times when they responded to more maternal cues, especially mother’s gesture. Significance Statement. These findings suggest that engagement with ostensive signals has nuanced effects on performance in EF tasks in infants. While these signals can positively
author2 Victoria Leong
author_facet Victoria Leong
Teo, Joan Wei Ling
format Thesis-Master by Research
author Teo, Joan Wei Ling
author_sort Teo, Joan Wei Ling
title Assessing the effects of engagement with maternal ostensive signals in infants with neurodevelopmental risk
title_short Assessing the effects of engagement with maternal ostensive signals in infants with neurodevelopmental risk
title_full Assessing the effects of engagement with maternal ostensive signals in infants with neurodevelopmental risk
title_fullStr Assessing the effects of engagement with maternal ostensive signals in infants with neurodevelopmental risk
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the effects of engagement with maternal ostensive signals in infants with neurodevelopmental risk
title_sort assessing the effects of engagement with maternal ostensive signals in infants with neurodevelopmental risk
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/181789
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