Do Balance Demands Induce Shifts in Visual Proprioception in Crawling Infants?

The onset of hands-and-knees crawling during the latter half of the first year of life heralds pervasive changes in a range of psychological functions. Chief among these changes is a clear shift in visual proprioception, evident in the way infants use patterns of optic flow in the peripheral field o...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: David I. Anderson, Minxuan He, Paula Gutierrez, Ichiro Uchiyama, Joseph J. Campos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01388/full
id doaj-75897708229545f9b5faed9775e1dceb
record_format Article
spelling doaj-75897708229545f9b5faed9775e1dceb2020-11-25T01:40:01ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782019-06-011010.3389/fpsyg.2019.01388458575Do Balance Demands Induce Shifts in Visual Proprioception in Crawling Infants?David I. Anderson0Minxuan He1Paula Gutierrez2Ichiro Uchiyama3Joseph J. Campos4Marian Wright Edelman Institute, San Francisco State University, San Francisco, CA, United StatesMarian Wright Edelman Institute, San Francisco State University, San Francisco, CA, United StatesDepartment of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, United StatesDepartment of Psychology, Doshisha University, Kyoto, JapanDepartment of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, United StatesThe onset of hands-and-knees crawling during the latter half of the first year of life heralds pervasive changes in a range of psychological functions. Chief among these changes is a clear shift in visual proprioception, evident in the way infants use patterns of optic flow in the peripheral field of view to regulate their postural sway. This shift is thought to result from consistent exposure in the newly crawling infant to different patterns of optic flow in the central field of view and the periphery and the need to concurrently process information about self-movement, particularly postural sway, and the environmental layout during crawling. Researchers have hypothesized that the demands on the infant’s visual system to concurrently process information about self-movement and the environment press the infant to differentiate and functionalize peripheral optic flow for the control of balance during locomotion so that the central field of view is freed to engage in steering and monitoring the surface and potentially other tasks. In the current experiment, we tested whether belly crawling, a mode of locomotion that places negligible demands on the control of balance, leads to the same changes in the functional utilization of peripheral optic flow for the control of postural sway as hands-and-knees crawling. We hypothesized that hands-and-knees crawlers (n = 15) would show significantly higher postural responsiveness to movements of the side walls and ceiling of a moving room than same-aged pre-crawlers (n = 19) and belly crawlers (n = 15) with an equivalent amount of crawling experience. Planned comparisons confirmed the hypothesis. Visual-postural coupling in the hands-and-knees crawlers was significantly higher than in the belly crawlers and pre-crawlers. These findings suggest that the balance demands associated with hands-and-knees crawling may be an important contributor to the changes in visual proprioception that have been demonstrated in several experiments to follow hands-and-knees crawling experience. However, we also consider that belly crawling may have less potent effects on visual proprioception because it is an effortful and attention-demanding mode of locomotion, thus leaving less attentional capacity available to notice changing relations between the self and the environment.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01388/fullbalancelocomotionmotor developmentoptic flowvision
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David I. Anderson
Minxuan He
Paula Gutierrez
Ichiro Uchiyama
Joseph J. Campos
spellingShingle David I. Anderson
Minxuan He
Paula Gutierrez
Ichiro Uchiyama
Joseph J. Campos
Do Balance Demands Induce Shifts in Visual Proprioception in Crawling Infants?
Frontiers in Psychology
balance
locomotion
motor development
optic flow
vision
author_facet David I. Anderson
Minxuan He
Paula Gutierrez
Ichiro Uchiyama
Joseph J. Campos
author_sort David I. Anderson
title Do Balance Demands Induce Shifts in Visual Proprioception in Crawling Infants?
title_short Do Balance Demands Induce Shifts in Visual Proprioception in Crawling Infants?
title_full Do Balance Demands Induce Shifts in Visual Proprioception in Crawling Infants?
title_fullStr Do Balance Demands Induce Shifts in Visual Proprioception in Crawling Infants?
title_full_unstemmed Do Balance Demands Induce Shifts in Visual Proprioception in Crawling Infants?
title_sort do balance demands induce shifts in visual proprioception in crawling infants?
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2019-06-01
description The onset of hands-and-knees crawling during the latter half of the first year of life heralds pervasive changes in a range of psychological functions. Chief among these changes is a clear shift in visual proprioception, evident in the way infants use patterns of optic flow in the peripheral field of view to regulate their postural sway. This shift is thought to result from consistent exposure in the newly crawling infant to different patterns of optic flow in the central field of view and the periphery and the need to concurrently process information about self-movement, particularly postural sway, and the environmental layout during crawling. Researchers have hypothesized that the demands on the infant’s visual system to concurrently process information about self-movement and the environment press the infant to differentiate and functionalize peripheral optic flow for the control of balance during locomotion so that the central field of view is freed to engage in steering and monitoring the surface and potentially other tasks. In the current experiment, we tested whether belly crawling, a mode of locomotion that places negligible demands on the control of balance, leads to the same changes in the functional utilization of peripheral optic flow for the control of postural sway as hands-and-knees crawling. We hypothesized that hands-and-knees crawlers (n = 15) would show significantly higher postural responsiveness to movements of the side walls and ceiling of a moving room than same-aged pre-crawlers (n = 19) and belly crawlers (n = 15) with an equivalent amount of crawling experience. Planned comparisons confirmed the hypothesis. Visual-postural coupling in the hands-and-knees crawlers was significantly higher than in the belly crawlers and pre-crawlers. These findings suggest that the balance demands associated with hands-and-knees crawling may be an important contributor to the changes in visual proprioception that have been demonstrated in several experiments to follow hands-and-knees crawling experience. However, we also consider that belly crawling may have less potent effects on visual proprioception because it is an effortful and attention-demanding mode of locomotion, thus leaving less attentional capacity available to notice changing relations between the self and the environment.
topic balance
locomotion
motor development
optic flow
vision
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01388/full
work_keys_str_mv AT davidianderson dobalancedemandsinduceshiftsinvisualproprioceptionincrawlinginfants
AT minxuanhe dobalancedemandsinduceshiftsinvisualproprioceptionincrawlinginfants
AT paulagutierrez dobalancedemandsinduceshiftsinvisualproprioceptionincrawlinginfants
AT ichirouchiyama dobalancedemandsinduceshiftsinvisualproprioceptionincrawlinginfants
AT josephjcampos dobalancedemandsinduceshiftsinvisualproprioceptionincrawlinginfants
_version_ 1725047643403452416