Almost two decades ago, the sticky mittens paradigm was demonstrated as a way to train reaching and grasping behaviors in pre-reaching infants, and consequently improve visual attentional abilities. In that first study, Needham and colleagues fitted 3-month-old infants with Velcro loop-covered mittens and allowed them to interact with Velcro hook-covered toys over the course of 2 weeks. In this review, we scrutinize the 17 studies that have followed those first sticky mittens results in regards to the motor, social perception, and visual attentional domains. Furthermore, we discuss the proposed mechanisms of the sticky mittens training. Current evidence strongly suggests that sticky mittens training facilitates social perception, which is consistent with prior correlational work showing links between action production and action perception. However, studies targeting motor and visual attentional abilities have too diverse results to warrant firm conclusions. We conclude that future research should focus on uncovering if there is a connection between sticky mittens training and motor behavior.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/desc.13036 | DOI Listing |
Psychol Bull
November 2023
Department of Psychology, Harvard University.
The relationship between experience and knowledge is one of the oldest and deepest questions in psychology. In developmental science, research on this question has focused on prereaching infants who cannot yet retrieve objects by reaching for and grasping them. Over the past 2 decades, behavioral research in this population has produced two seemingly contradictory findings: After first-person experience with reaching via "sticky mittens" training, (a) infants come to expect that people reach efficiently, toward goal objects, but (b) under some conditions, they can express these expectations without training.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Occup Ther Pediatr
February 2023
Department of Physiotherapy, Federal University of São Carlos, São Carlos, São Paulo, Brazil.
Aim: To systematically review evidence of the effectiveness of sticky mittens training to improve reaching skills and manual exploration of full-term and at-risk infants and optimal training dosage.
Methods: The Cochrane Collaboration and Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guided this systematic review. The electronic search was performed from September 2017 to August 2021 on PubMed, Scopus, Science Direct, and Cochrane databases.
Child Dev
November 2022
Department of Psychology, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.
Several studies have previously investigated the effects of sticky mittens training on reaching and grasping development. However, recent critique casted doubts on the robustness of the motor effect of this training. The current study presents a pre-registered report that aimed to generalize these effects to Swedish infants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPediatr Phys Ther
April 2022
Department of Physical Therapy (Ms Inamdar), Rehabilitation and Movement Science Program, Motor Development Lab, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia; Department of Physical Therapy (Dr Khurana), Motor Development Lab, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia; Division of Biokinesiology and Physical Therapy (Dr Dusing), Motor Development Lab, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California.
Purpose: The purpose of this systematic review was to identify controlled trials evaluating the efficacy of contingency paradigm-based interventions to improve feeding, motor, or cognitive outcomes during the first year of life.
Summary Of Key Points: Seventeen studies, including 10 randomized controlled trials, incorporating contingency paradigm-based interventions were identified. Three of 3 trials reported improvements in nutritive sucking using pacifier-activated lullaby in preterm infants before term age.
Dev Sci
September 2021
Department of Psychology, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.
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