Early Emerging Gradients in Children's Eye Movement Times Across Levels of Household Resources
Jukka M. Leppänen, Juha Pyykkö, Denise Evans, Lezanie Coetzee, Günther Fink, Aisha K. Yousafzai, David H. Hamer, Doug Parkerson, Peter C. Rockers

TL;DR
Eye movement latencies in young children show early signs of being influenced by household resources, with longer delays in poorer environments.
Contribution
This study provides novel quantitative evidence of early-emerging behavioral gradients linked to poverty in low-resource settings.
Findings
Eye movement latencies were longer in children from households with fewer assets.
The gradient in latencies increased between 7 and 36 months of age.
Similar patterns were observed in responses to socially cued objects and replicated in Zambia.
Abstract
Studies in low‐resource settings suggest that multiple aspects of early childhood development are sensitive to the relative poverty of a child's environment. We examined whether direct, quantitative measures of early developing cognitive functions show a similar association with relative poverty. Eye movement latencies were recorded in children at 7, 17, and 36 months in rural South Africa (N = 374). The latency to respond to the appearance of visual objects was inversely associated with a proxy measure of the child's socioeconomic environment (household asset ownership), with longer latencies observed in children from households with less asset‐based resources. This gradient was detectable at 7 months, increased between 7 and 36 months, was not explained by differences in prior exposure to screens, and generalized to the latency of eye movements towards socially cued objects (i.e.,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEarly Childhood Education and Development · Child Nutrition and Water Access · Obesity, Physical Activity, Diet
