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Early Childhood Media Exposure and Self-Regulation: Bidirectional Longitudinal Associations

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posted on 2024-11-16, 02:42 authored by Dylan CliffDylan Cliff, Steven HowardSteven Howard, Jenny Radesky, Jade Mcneill, Stewart VellaStewart Vella
Objective: To investigate: 1) prospective associations between media exposure (television viewing, computers, and electronic games) at 2 years and self-regulation at 4 and 6 years, and 2) bidirectional associations between media exposure and self-regulation at 4 and 6 years. We hypothesized that media exposure and self-regulation would show a negative prospective association and subsequent bidirectional inverse associations. Methods: Data from the nationally-representative Longitudinal Study of Australian Children when children were aged 2 years (n = 2786) and 4/6 years (n = 3527) were used. Primary caregivers reported children's weekly electronic media exposure. A composite measure of self-regulation was computed from caregiver-, teacher-, and observer-report data. Associations were examined using linear regression and cross-lagged panel models, accounting for covariates. Results: Lower television viewing and total media exposure at 2 years were associated with higher self-regulation at 4 years (both β = −0.02; 95% confidence interval [CI], −0.03 to −0.01). Lower self-regulation at 4 years was also significantly associated with higher television viewing (β = −0.15; 95% CI, −0.21 to −0.08), electronic game use (β = −0.05; 95% CI, −0.09 to −0.01), and total media exposure (β = −0.19; 95% CI, −0.29 to −0.09) at 6 years. However, media exposure at 4 years was not associated with self-regulation at 6 years. Conclusions: Although media exposure duration at 2 years was associated with later self-regulation, and self-regulation at 4 years was associated with later media exposure, associations were of small magnitude. More research is needed to examine content quality, social context, and mobile media use and child self-regulation.

Funding

Do physical activity and electronic screen behaviours influence cognitive and psychosocial development in preschool children? Levels of physical inactivity and screen-based entertainment are alarmingly high among preschool children, yet little is known about the independent effects of these behaviours on cognitive and psychosocial development during early childhood

Australian Research Council

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Self-regulation in children

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Cliff, D. P., Howard, S. J., Radesky, J. S., McNeill, J. & Vella, S. A. (2018). Early Childhood Media Exposure and Self-Regulation: Bidirectional Longitudinal Associations. Academic Pediatrics, 18 (7), 813-819.

Journal title

Academic Pediatrics

Volume

18

Issue

7

Pagination

813-819

Language

English

RIS ID

129841

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