AI Article Synopsis

  • Various lifestyle factors like diet, physical activity, and sleep influence children's health, but their effects on cognitive abilities, especially spatial cognition, are under-researched.
  • A key development in spatial orientation occurs between ages 2.5 and 3, where children start using allocentric reference frames alongside egocentric ones.
  • In a study of toddlers aged 30-36 months, researchers found a slight increase in allocentric performance and identified negative associations between screen time, maternal gestational weight gain, and spatial task performance, paving the way for future studies on lifestyle factors and spatial cognition.

Article Abstract

Various lifestyle factors, including diet, physical activity, and sleep, have been studied in the context of children's health. However, how these lifestyle factors contribute to the development of cognitive abilities, including spatial cognition, remains vastly understudied. One landmark in spatial cognitive development occurs between 2.5 and 3 years of age. For spatial orientation at that age, children learn to use allocentric reference frames (using spatial relations between objects as the primary reference frame) in addition to, the already acquired, egocentric reference frames (using one's own body as the primary reference frame). In the current virtual reality study in a sample of 30-36-month-old toddlers ( = 57), we first demonstrated a marginally significant developmental shift in spatial orientation. Specifically, task performance with allocentric performance increased relative to egocentric performance ( = 0.06). Next, we explored a variety of lifestyle factors, including diet, in relation to task performance, to explain individual differences. Screen time and gestational weight gain of the mother were negatively associated with spatial task performance. The findings presented here can be used to guide future confirmatory studies about the role of lifestyle factors in the development of spatial cognition.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9414767PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu14163322DOI Listing

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