Grzadzinski Rebecca, Carpenter Raymond S, Rutsohn Josh, Jatkar Alapika, Mata Kattia, Bhatt Ambika, Ortiz-Juza Maria M, Dennehey Madison R, Gilleskie Donna, Elison Jed T, Pégard Nicolas, Rodriguez-Romaguera Jose
Department of Psychiatry, UNC Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Carolina Institute for Developmental Disabilities, UNC Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
J Neurodev Disord. 2025 Aug 1;17(1):44. doi: 10.1186/s11689-025-09628-2.
Pupil changes in response to well-controlled stimuli can be used to understand processes that regulate attention, learning, and arousal. This study investigates whether pupil dynamics to social stimuli are associated with concurrent adaptive behavior in typically developing infants. To accomplish this, we developed and assessed pupillary responses to Stimuli for Early Social Arousal and Motivation in Infants (SESAMI).
A sample of forty-six typically developing children aged six to twenty-four months were exposed to SESAMI. Infants were presented with either dynamic social faces or non-social stimuli that controlled for luminance, motion, and auditory exposure. A multi-level mixed effects model was used to fit pupillary response functions (PRFs) that measure the change in pupil size over time as the infants fixate on either a socially dynamic face or a non-social control. This model produces separate social and non-social PRFs for both the population and each individual. An average individual deviation score from the population PRF was calculated separately for social and non-social trials yielding the pupil response index (PRI). Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales (VABS) were regressed on social and non-social individual PRIs while controlling for age and average fixation time. We tested whether the social PRI was a statistically significant predictor of adaptive behavior by comparing the model predicted VABS scores with observed scores.
An increase in PRI to social stimuli was significantly associated with better adaptive behaviors in typically developing children between 6 and 24 months of age.
SESAMI combined with pupillometry and multi-level mixed effects modeling, provides a novel and scalable framework for quantifying individual differences in pupil changes in response to social stimuli relative to a population-level baseline. By demonstrating that pupil response indices during social fixations predict adaptive behaviors, we lay the foundation to test how these measures may help identify infants with intellectual and developmental disorders.
The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s11689-025-09628-2.
瞳孔对受控刺激的变化可用于理解调节注意力、学习和唤醒的过程。本研究调查了典型发育婴儿对社会刺激的瞳孔动态是否与同时出现的适应性行为相关。为实现这一目标,我们开发并评估了婴儿早期社会唤醒和动机刺激(SESAMI)的瞳孔反应。
对46名6至24个月大的典型发育儿童进行了SESAMI测试。向婴儿展示动态社交面孔或控制亮度、运动和听觉暴露的非社交刺激。使用多层次混合效应模型来拟合瞳孔反应函数(PRF),该函数测量婴儿注视社交动态面孔或非社交对照时瞳孔大小随时间的变化。该模型为总体和每个个体生成单独的社交和非社交PRF。分别计算社交和非社交试验中个体与总体PRF的平均偏差分数,得出瞳孔反应指数(PRI)。在控制年龄和平均注视时间的同时,将文兰适应性行为量表(VABS)与社交和非社交个体PRI进行回归分析。我们通过比较模型预测的VABS分数与观察分数,测试社交PRI是否是适应性行为的统计学显著预测指标。
在6至24个月大的典型发育儿童中,对社交刺激的PRI增加与更好的适应性行为显著相关。
SESAMI结合瞳孔测量和多层次混合效应建模,提供了一个新颖且可扩展的框架,用于量化个体对社会刺激的瞳孔变化相对于总体水平基线的差异。通过证明社交注视期间的瞳孔反应指数可预测适应性行为,我们为测试这些测量方法如何有助于识别智力和发育障碍婴儿奠定了基础。
在线版本包含可在10.1186/s11689-025-09628-2获取的补充材料。