# Non‐Linear Changes in Face Availability During Naturalistic Playtime Across the First Years: Insights From Head‐Mounted Cameras and Automated Face Detection

**Authors:** Teodor Y. Nikolov, Hana D'Souza

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/desc.70121 · Developmental Science · 2026-01-27

## TL;DR

This study shows how the number of faces a child sees during playtime changes in complex ways across their first three years, using wearable cameras and automated detection.

## Contribution

The study reveals non-linear, region-specific changes in face availability during playtime in early childhood using head-mounted cameras and automated analysis.

## Key findings

- Face availability in the middle visual region peaks in early infancy, declines steeply, then modestly increases after one year.
- Face presence in the top region increases during the second year before decreasing, while the bottom region consistently shows low face presence.
- Face size variability is higher in younger infants, suggesting caregiver-driven interactions.

## Abstract

Faces provide crucial input for early development. This study leveraged innovations in wearable head‐mounted cameras (headcams; specifically, TinyExplorer gear) and automated face detection (RetinaFace) to characterise the everyday visual availability of faces during playtime in the home environment across the first years. Using a cross‐sectional developmental trajectory design, we collected egocentric headcam data from 29 young children across the first 3 years of life (2–30 months). The dataset comprised 1,891 minutes of video (over 5.5 million frames). We examined cross‐sectional developmental trajectories in face availability, spatial distribution, size and size variability. We observed distinct non‐linear changes in face availability across three vertically defined regions of the egocentric video (bottom/middle/top). In early infancy, faces were most common in the middle, with an initial steep decline followed by a modest increase after the first year. In the top region, during the second year, face presence increased and then decreased. The bottom region consistently showed low face presence. These findings suggest that the availability of faces is not only age‐dependent but also region‐specific, reflecting dynamic reorganisation of everyday visual input. Additionally, face size variability was greater in younger infants, consistent with caregiver‐driven interactions. We interpret our findings in the context of emerging motor abilities. By focusing on a specific activity (playtime), this study demonstrates how nuanced patterns can be detected using shorter recordings than in previous studies—enabling scalability and inclusivity of naturalistic research. These results offer new insights into early face availability and demonstrate the value of integrating naturalistic methods with automated analysis to advance developmental theory.

The availability of faces in egocentric views across the first 3 years shows non‐linear changes that vary by spatial region of the visual scene.Context‐constrained (playtime) egocentric recordings reveal subtle changes using relatively short recordings, facilitating more accessible head‐mounted camera data collection.Integration of head‐mounted cameras and automated face detection enables the scalable, spatially sensitive analysis of the real‐world visual availability of faces across the first years.

The availability of faces in egocentric views across the first 3 years shows non‐linear changes that vary by spatial region of the visual scene.

Context‐constrained (playtime) egocentric recordings reveal subtle changes using relatively short recordings, facilitating more accessible head‐mounted camera data collection.

Integration of head‐mounted cameras and automated face detection enables the scalable, spatially sensitive analysis of the real‐world visual availability of faces across the first years.

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

45 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12836453/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12836453