• Crawling important step in development o

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Wed Aug 4 21:30:38 2021
    Crawling important step in development of risk perception

    Date:
    August 4, 2021
    Source:
    University of Otago
    Summary:
    The more crawling experience a baby has, the more likely they are
    to avoid falling into water, a new study shows.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    The more crawling experience a baby has, the more likely they are to
    avoid falling into water, a University of Otago study shows.


    ========================================================================== Published in Infancy, the work is part of a longitudinal study into the
    effect locomotor experience has on infants' avoidance of falling over
    sudden drop- offs.

    Lead author Dr Carolina Burnay, of the School of Physical Education,
    Sport and Exercise Sciences, says the researchers tested babies' behaviour around a tub filled with water, termed a water drop-off.

    "The main difference between the babies that fell and those who avoided
    falling in the water was the amount of crawling experience they had.

    "A very interesting result was that the amount of prior crawling
    experience they had informed their perception of the risk and behaviour
    even when they were already walking -- hence it seems very helpful for
    babies to crawl and explore their environment," she says.

    The findings go against the contemporary tendency to 'helicopter parent'.



    ========================================================================== "Caregivers should be aware of the important role crawling plays in
    infant development and the benefits of promoting crawling opportunities
    for their infants. By touching the floor and looking closely to it,
    infants learn to distinguish safe from unsafe surfaces to locomote and
    start avoiding falls, into the water or not.

    "Over-protecting babies by limiting their opportunities to self-locomote
    does not keep them safe, instead, it delays their development of the
    perception of risky situations." Dr Burnay has also conducted a study
    into how babies interact with a slope leading to water.

    The study, just published in Developmental Psychobiology, allowed babies
    to move into the water down a gradual slope, similar to a beach leading
    to the ocean. In this case, locomotor experience had no impact on babies' behaviour - - they were more likely to engage in risky behaviour on the
    slope compared to the drop-off.

    "Before these studies, we knew statistics about drowning among babies,
    numbers like how many babies drown every year, how many drowning incidents occur in beaches or swimming pools, and what ages are the most represented
    in drowning statistics. This new approach is investigating how infants
    relate with bodies of water, when and how they start perceiving the risk
    and avoiding drowning.

    "If we want to develop better strategies to prevent drowning among young children, we need to understand how they interact with bodies of water
    and how they learn to perceive the consequences that interacting with
    bodies of water can impose," Dr Burnay says.

    The study also highlights the risk slopes into bodies of water pose
    to babies.

    Parents and those working in water safety should have increased vigilance around such accessways and prevent infants' access to them in aquatic environments.

    Dr Burnay is continuing her studies into how babies interact with bodies
    of water and is seeking participants (crawlers or walkers aged under
    18-months) for testing at Moana Pool in Dunedin.

    The babies tested on the water cliff were from Portugal, while those
    tested on the water slope were from Dunedin. To determine if the different findings are the impact of cultural difference, she is testing babies
    in both situations.

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by University_of_Otago. Note: Content
    may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal References:
    1. Carolina Burnay, Rita Cordovil, Chris Button, James L. Croft,
    David I.

    Anderson. Experienced crawlers avoid real and water drop‐offs,
    even when they are walking. Infancy, 2021; DOI: 10.1111/infa.12419
    2. Carolina Burnay, Chris Button, Rita Cordovil, David I. Anderson,
    James L.

    Croft. Do infants avoid a traversable slope leading into deep water?
    Developmental Psychobiology, 2021; DOI: 10.1002/dev.22169 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/08/210804123619.htm

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