Background Tv and Infant-Family Interactions: Insights From Home Observations
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Date
2024
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Wiley
Open Access Color
HYBRID
Green Open Access
No
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Publicly Funded
No
Abstract
Background television has been found to negatively impact children's language development and self-regulatory skills, possibly due to decreased parent-child interactions. Most of the research on the relationship between background TV and caregiver-child interactions has been conducted in laboratory settings. In the current study, we conducted home observations and investigated whether infants engage in fewer interactions with family members in homes where background TV is more prevalent. We observed 32 infants at the ages of 8, 10, and 18 months in their home environments, coding for dyadic interactions (e.g., parent talking to and/or engaging with the child), triadic interactions (e.g., parent and infant play with a toy together), and infants' individual activities. Our findings revealed that background TV was negatively associated with the time infants spent in triadic interactions, positively associated with time spent engaging in individual activities, and not significantly related to the time spent in dyadic interactions. Apart from the relationship between background TV and individual activity time at 8 months, these associations remained significant even after accounting for families' socioeconomic status. These findings imply a correlation between background TV exposure and caregiver-infant-object interactions, warranting a longitudinal analysis with larger sample sizes.
Description
Uzundag, Berna/0000-0003-1192-691X; Koskulu-Sancar, Sumeyye/0000-0001-9221-2294
Keywords
[No Keyword Available], Male, Infant, Play and Playthings, Child Development, Infant Behavior, Humans, Television, Female, Parent-Child Relations
Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL
Fields of Science
Citation
WoS Q
Q2
Scopus Q
Q2

OpenCitations Citation Count
N/A
Source
Infancy
Volume
29
Issue
Start Page
590
End Page
607
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Citations
Scopus : 1
Captures
Mendeley Readers : 22
SCOPUS™ Citations
2
checked on Feb 03, 2026
Page Views
5
checked on Feb 03, 2026
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