This research was conducted by Bahar Tunçgenç, Emma Cohen and Christine Fawcett at the University of Oxford, UK and Uppsala University, Sweden

Summary

Although coordinated movements enable early social interactions, little is known about the effect of movement synchrony throughout human development. This paper reports on a study of infants’ preferences for synchronous stimuli in a social and non-social context. It found that children at 12 months of age (though not at nine months) expressed a preference for synchronously moving toys when displayed in a social manner. The paper has important implications for using synchrony to enhance the lives of young children.

Infants choose synchronous over non-synchronous movements from early in life

In the study, 40 children aged 12 months old took part in two sessions where they were sat in a chair and rocked to the same – or different – rhythm as two distinct video stimuli, each representing a type of toy: a teddy bear that talked and gestured (social stimulus) and a colourful box that made sounds and was lit up (non-social stimulus).  After the rocking phase, they were shown each toy in sequence and encouraged to choose the one they liked best. The first toy the children reached for (and touched) was recorded as their preferred choice. In order to explore potential developmental patterns, a second identical experiment was conducted with 41 nine-month olds. Children in this experiment did not display a preference for synchronously moving toys in either the social (bear) or non-social (box) setting.

Associations between movement synchrony and social behaviour warrant further investigation

Lack of preference in the younger infants could be explained by difficulties perceiving synchronicity, a preference not strong enough to be detected, or a misinterpretation of the social stimulus. Authors suggest that self-propelled movement and stimuli presented live – rather than through video – might in future have a more obvious effect on children’s choices.

This summary is by Anna Kolliakou, King’s Knowledge Exchange Associate

Title Rock with me: the role of movement synchrony in infants' social and nonsocial Choices
Author(s) Tunçgenç, B., Cohen, E., & Fawcett, C.
Publication date 2015
Source Child Development, Vol 86, Iss 3, pp 976-984
Link http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/wol1/doi/10.1111/cdev.12354/full
Open Access Link http://users.ox.ac.uk/~soca0093/pdfs/TuncgencCohenFawcettCD2015.pdf
Author email tuncgenc@anthro.ox.ac.uk