Early cognitive assessment in premature infants: the discriminatory value of eye-tracking vs. Bayley Scales

被引:0
|
作者
Kaltsa, Maria [1 ]
Babacheva, Evgenia [2 ,3 ]
Fotiadou, Georgia [4 ]
Goutsiou, Evanthia [2 ,3 ]
Kantziou, Katerina [5 ,6 ]
Nicolaidis, Katerina [7 ]
Soubasi, Vasiliki [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Aristotle Univ Thessaloniki, Sch English, Dept Theoret & Appl Linguist, Language Dev Lab, Thessaloniki, Greece
[2] Aristotle Univ Thessaloniki, Gen Hosp Papageorgiou, Sch Med, Dept Neonatol 2, Thessaloniki, Greece
[3] Aristotle Univ Thessaloniki, Gen Hosp Papageorgiou, Sch Med, NICU, Thessaloniki, Greece
[4] Aristotle Univ Thessaloniki, Sch Philol, Dept Linguist, LingLab, Thessaloniki, Greece
[5] Aristotle Univ Thessaloniki, Hippokrat Gen Hosp, Neonatal Dept 1, Thessaloniki, Greece
[6] Aristotle Univ Thessaloniki, Hippokrat Gen Hosp, NICU, Thessaloniki, Greece
[7] Aristotle Univ Thessaloniki, Sch English, Dept Theoret & Appl Linguist, Phonet Lab, Thessaloniki, Greece
来源
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY | 2024年 / 15卷
关键词
eye-tracking; cognitive screening; Bayley Scales; prematurity; neurodevelopmental delays; assessment; AUDITORY RECOGNITION MEMORY; WORKING-MEMORY; IRON-DEFICIENCY; PRETERM INFANTS; EXTREME PREMATURITY; TODDLER DEVELOPMENT; ATTENTION SYSTEM; VISUAL-ATTENTION; NEWBORN-INFANTS; GESTATIONAL-AGE;
D O I
10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1384486
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Introduction The testing of visuocognitive development in preterm infants shows strong interactions between perinatal characteristics and cognition, learning and overall neurodevelopment evolution. The assessment of anticipatory gaze data of object-location bindings via eye-tracking can predict the neurodevelopment of preterm infants at the age of 3 years; little is known, however, about the early cognitive function and its assessment methods during the first year of life.Methods The current study presents data from a novel assessment tool, a Delayed Match Retrieval (DMR) paradigm via eye-tracking was used to measure visual working memory (VWM) and attention skills. The eye-tracking task that was designed to measure infants' ability to actively localize objects and to make online predictions of object-location bindings. 63 infants participated in the study, 39 preterm infants and 24 healthy full term infants - at a corrected age of 8-9 months for premature infants and similar chronological age for full term infants. Infants were also administered the Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development.Results The analysis of the Bayley scores showed no significant difference between the two groups while the eye-tracking data showed a significant group effect on all measurements. Moreover, preterm infants' VWM performance was significantly lower than full term's. Birth weight affected the gaze time on all Areas Of Interest (AOIs), overall VWM performance and the scores at the Cognitive Bayley subscale. Furthermore, preterm infants with fetal growth restriction (FGR) showed significant performance effects in the eye-tracking measurements but not on their Bayley scores verifying the high discriminatory value of the eye gaze data.Conclusion Visual working memory and attention as measured via eye-tracking is a non-intrusive, painless, short duration procedure (approx. 4-min) was found to be a significant tool for identifying prematurity and FGR effects on the development of cognition during the first year of life. Bayley Scales alone may not pick up these deficits. Identifying tools for early neurodevelopmental assessments and cognitive function is important in order to enable earlier support and intervention in the vulnerable group of premature infants, given the associations between foundational executive functional skills and later cognitive and academic ability.
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