Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the project had to be adjusted to the circumstances by conducting most experiments online and developing the method of online testing on small and large scale.
Based on the Goldilocks effect described in earlier research, four online studies measuring infants’ visual exploration and attention allocation have been conducted. Instead of focusing on the complexity of the sequence, the studies investigated infants preferences for various levels of visual complexity. For example, do infants prefer simple drawings of an animal over real-life photos? And how do their preferences change with age in the first year of life? More than 150 datasets have been acquired and are in the process of being analysed. The results are expected to increase our understanding of how infants learn from observing their environment. They will furthermore help developmental scientists to create studies that are engaging for infants by better knowing what infants like to see.
Originally, the InterPlay project foresaw the inclusion of a caregiver-infant interaction component. The plan was to investigate to what extent caregivers guide or maintain infants' visual attention and whether these attention guiding or maintaining behaviors could have a beneficial influence on infants’ learning. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, this research could not be carried out as planned. Instead of bringing infants and caregivers into the lab, an online study has been set up. This study allows caregivers and infants to do a small interaction game at home while being recorded on video. The study makes use of a novel method to acquire rich data that aims to closely mimic the laboratory setup. The data collection for this study is still in progress. Our pilot data is looking promising for wider adoption of this new method both for scientific purposes as well as for clinical or educative applications.
Triggered by the experiences and based on the expertise acquired with the aforementioned online studies, the still growing "ManyBabies-AtHome" initiative (an international, multi-lab collaborative project that aims to improve online developmental science experiments and make the methods globally accessible) has been started out of InterPlay. Online testing in developmental science is usually done in North America or Europe and often targets participants from these continents. The method has the potential to reach a much more diverse population, though. ManyBabies-AtHome is overcoming the hurdles associated with studying larger, more diverse samples of infants via browser-based experiments. A second goal is to provide a large, multicultural, annotated dataset that can be used for training more accurate automatic gaze coding algorithms for developmental science. The first study that has been set up within the consortium is testing infants’ preference for visual stimuli and attention allocation. Differently from earlier studies on this topic, this study will acquire a dataset from infants across the world, allowing for cross-cultural comparisons as well as in-lab versus online comparisons. Once the first study has been shown successful, the consortium plans to conduct various other studies.