Infant Development Clinical Trial
— iBabyOfficial title:
Maternal Technology Use During Feeding and Infant Self-Regulation and Growth
Maternal sensitivity and contingent responsiveness to infant behavioral cues is an important contributor to infants' developing capacities to self-regulate. During early infancy, feeding interactions comprise a significant portion of mother-infant dyadic interactions and high-quality feeding interactions provide both nutritive and socioemotional benefits; recent data suggest that, for many dyads, mothers' sensitive responsiveness during feeding interactions is routinely impacted by the omnipresence of portable technology. The objective of the proposed research is to better understand the development and possible impacts of maternal technology use on infant feeding interactions, emotion and intake regulation, and sociobehavioral and growth outcomes.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 345 |
Est. completion date | June 30, 2027 |
Est. primary completion date | January 1, 2027 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | N/A and older |
Eligibility | Eligibility Criteria At the time of recruitment, eligibility criteria for participants will include: - 18 years of age or older - In 3rd trimester of singleton pregnancy - History of healthy, low-risk pregnancy - Lives within 50 miles of the Cal Poly campus - Owns a mobile device After the child is born, eligibility criteria for participants will remain in the study will include: - Infant was born term (gestational age =37 weeks) Exclusion criteria include - Mother has an untreated medical or psychiatric condition (e.g. bipolar disorder) that could impede study participation or affect mother-infant interaction - Mother is participating in another interventional study that influences parenting, mother-infant interactions, feeding practices, or technology use - The mother is unwilling or unable to commit to longitudinal follow-ups of herself or her child - Infant was born preterm (gestational age <37 weeks) - Infant diagnosed with fetal abnormality or medical condition that interferes with oral feeding (e.g., feeding disorder, milk protein allergy) or development - Infant diagnosed with developmental delay (e.g., Down's syndrome) |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | California Polytechnic State University | San Luis Obispo | California |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
California Polytechnic State University-San Luis Obispo | Parkview Health, University of Michigan |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Change between infant age 1 month and 4 months for effects of TV and Mobile Devices on Maternal Sensitivity to Infant Cues during Feeding | When infants are 1 month and 4 months of age, mother-infant dyads will be observed during 3 within-subject experimental feeding conditions: TV Use, Mobile Device Use, or Control. Videos of feeding interactions will be later coded using the Nursing Child Assessment Parent-Child Interaction Feeding Scale (NCAFS). Possible score range for the Maternal Sensitivity to Infant Cues subscale is 0-16 with higher scores representing greater maternal sensitivity to infant cues. | Infant ages 1 month and 4 months | |
Primary | Change between infant age 1 month and 4 months for effects of TV and Mobile Devices on Maternal Socioemotional Growth Fostering during Feeding | When infants are 1 month and 4 months of age, mother-infant dyads will be observed during 3 within-subject experimental feeding conditions: TV Use, Mobile Device Use, or Control. Videos of feeding interactions will be later coded using the Nursing Child Assessment Parent-Child Interaction Feeding Scale (NCAFS). Possible score range for the Maternal Socioemotional Growth Fostering subscale is 0-14 with higher scores representing greater maternal socioemotional growth fostering. | Infant ages 1 month and 4 months | |
Primary | Change between infant age 1 month and 4 months for effects of TV and Mobile Devices on Maternal Cognitive Growth Fostering during Feeding | When infants are 1 month and 4 months of age, mother-infant dyads will be observed during 3 within-subject experimental feeding conditions: TV Use, Mobile Device Use, or Control. Videos of feeding interactions will be later coded using the Nursing Child Assessment Parent-Child Interaction Feeding Scale (NCAFS). Possible score range for the Maternal Cognitive Growth Fostering subscale is 0-9 with higher scores representing greater maternal cognitive growth fostering. | Infant ages 1 month and 4 months | |
Primary | Change between infant age 1 month and 4 months for effects of TV and Mobile Devices on Maternal Attentiveness to the Infant during Feeding | When infants are 1 month and 4 months of age, mother-infant dyads will be observed during 3 within-subject experimental feeding conditions: TV Use, Mobile Device Use, or Control. Videos of feeding interactions will be later coded to determine the percentage of time the mother spent looking at the device versus her infant, with greater percent time spent looking at the infant representing greater maternal attentiveness to the infant. | Infant ages 1 month and 4 months | |
Primary | Change between infant age 1 month and 4 months for effects of TV and Mobile Devices on Infant Clarity of Cues during Feeding | When infants are 1 month and 4 months of age, mother-infant dyads will be observed during 3 within-subject experimental feeding conditions: TV Use, Mobile Device Use, or Control. Videos of feeding interactions will be later coded using the Nursing Child Assessment Parent-Child Interaction Feeding Scale (NCAFS). Possible score range for the Infant Clarity of Cues subscale is 0-15 with higher scores representing greater infant clarity of cues. | Infant ages 1 month and 4 months | |
Primary | Change between infant age 1 month and 4 months for effects of TV and Mobile Devices on Infant Attentional Responsiveness to the Mother during Feeding | When infants are 1 month and 4 months of age, mother-infant dyads will be observed during 3 within-subject experimental feeding conditions: TV Use, Mobile Device Use, or Control. Videos of feeding interactions will be later coded to determine the percentage of time the infant spent looking at the mother, with greater percent time spent looking at the mother representing greater infant attentiveness to the mother. | Infant ages 1 month and 4 months | |
Primary | Change between infant age 1 month and 4 months for effects of TV and Mobile Devices on Infant Intake Feeding | When infants are 1 month and 4 months of age, mother-infant dyads will be observed during 3 within-subject experimental feeding conditions: TV Use, Mobile Device Use, or Control. The infant will be weighed before and after feeding to determine amount consumed during the feeding. | Infant ages 1 month and 4 months | |
Primary | Change between infant age 1 month and 4 months for effects of TV and Mobile Devices on Meal Duration | When infants are 1 month and 4 months of age, mother-infant dyads will be observed during 3 within-subject experimental feeding conditions: TV Use, Mobile Device Use, or Control. Videos of feeding interactions will be later coded to determine the duration of the meal. | Infant ages 1 month and 4 months | |
Primary | Change between infant age 1 month and 4 months for effects of TV and Mobile Devices on Rate of Feeding | When infants are 1 month and 4 months of age, mother-infant dyads will be observed during 3 within-subject experimental feeding conditions: TV Use, Mobile Device Use, or Control. Infant intake (mL) will be divided by meal duration (min) to determine rate of feeding (mL/min). | Infant ages 1 month and 4 months | |
Primary | Change Infant Emotion Regulation between infant ages 4 months, 6 months, and 12 months | Infant emotion regulation capacity will be assessed via both observational and maternal-reported measures. Observational measures will come from infant behavior during the Still Face Paradigm described in the intervention section; videos of infant behavior during this paradigm will be coded using the infant-caregiver engagement phases (ICEP). Maternal-reported emotion regulation will come from the Infant Behavior Questionnaire-Revised Very Short Form. These observational and maternal-reported measures will be combined into a composite score representing infant emotion regulation capacity. Greater scores will represent greater emotion regulation capacity. | Infant ages 4 months, 6 months, and 12 months | |
Primary | Change in Infant Intake Regulation between infant ages 4 months, 6 months, and 12 months | Infant intake regulation capacity will be assessed via both observational and maternal-reported measures. Infant intake regulation will be assessed via percent difference scores gleaned from the Caloric Compensation and COMPX protocols described in the intervention section. Maternal reported infant self-regulation of intake (satiety responsiveness) will also be assessing using the Baby Eating Behavior Questionnaire (BEBQ) at and the Child Eating Behavior Questionnaire for Toddlers (CEBQ-T). These observational and maternal-reported measures will be combined into a composite score representing infant intake regulation capacity. Greater scores will represent greater intake regulation capacity. | Infant ages 4 months, 6 months, and 12 months | |
Primary | Infant Socioemotional and Behavioral Problems | Mothers will complete the Brief Infant-Toddler Social Emotional Assessment (BITSEA), a 42-item questionnaire that indexes the presence of social-emotional and behavioral problems and competencies that has been extensively validated for use with children from 12-36 months of age. Broad domains assessed include Internalizing (depression/withdrawal, general anxiety, inhibition to novelty, separation distress subscales), Externalizing (activity/impulsivity, aggression/defiance, peer aggression subscales), Dysregulation (negative emotionality, sleep, eating, sensory sensitivity subscales), and Competence (compliance, attention, mastery motivation, imitation/play, empathy, prosocial peer relations subscales). A mean score will be calculated with higher scores indicating poorer socioemotional and behavioral adjustment. | Infant age 12 months | |
Primary | Change in infant weight between birth and 12 months of age | A trained research assistant will collect infant weight and length measurements in triplicate using an infant scale/infantometer (models 374 and 233; Seca, Hamburg, Germany). Infant anthropometric data will be normalized to z-scores using the World Health Organization (WHO) Anthro software (http://www.who.int/childgrowth/en/) to calculate age- and sex-specific z-scores based on the WHO growth standards. | Birth to 12 months | |
Secondary | Maternal habitual technology use | At every assessment, mothers' daily technology use patterns will be assessed by passive sensing of their mobile devices (e.g., smartphone, tablet) via an app (RescueTime) installed on the mother's mobile device(s). The app will assess amount of device use in a continuous fashion across 5 consecutive days. Mothers will also keep daily time-use diaries that will be linked with passive sensing data to determine, at each postnatal time point, (a) the average amount of time mothers were on their device while with their infant divided by the total amount of time mothers were with their infant and also (b) the average amount of time on a device during infant feeding divided by the total amount of time spent in feeding. These are calculated as proportions to control for how some mothers may be with their infant more on a daily basis than other mothers. | Prenatal to 12 months postpartum |
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