Neonatal Sleep Predicts Attention Orienting and Distractibility
- PMID: 23893532
- DOI: 10.1177/1087054713491493
Neonatal Sleep Predicts Attention Orienting and Distractibility
Abstract
Objective: Children with sleep disorders tend to experience attention problems, yet little is known about the relationship between sleep and attention in early development. This prospective follow-up study investigated the longitudinal relationships between neonatal sleep, attention, and distraction in infants born preterm.
Method: We used actigraphy and sleep-wake diaries in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU, N = 65), attention orienting in a visual-recognition-memory task (VRM) at age 4 months, and structured observation of attention and distractibility at age 18 months.
Results: Infants with poorer neonatal sleep (n = 31) exhibited longer first gaze durations in the VRM at 4 months and longer distraction episodes at 18 months relative to neonatal controls who slept well (p < .01). Hierarchical regression models support relations between neonatal sleep and gaze behavior at 4 months and distractibility at 18 months; moreover, alterations in orienting attention at 4 months predicted the likelihood of being distracted during the second year of life.
Conclusion: Findings underscore the importance of early sleep-wake and attention regulation in the development of distraction in infants born preterm.
Keywords: attention; infant; prematurity; sleep.
© The Author(s) 2013.
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