Fiji Sun

Genetics impacts how kids explore the world visually

The researcher­s also found that they could reliably identify a twin with their sibling from among a pool of unrelated individual­s based on their shared gaze patterns a novel method they termed “gaze fingerprin­ting.”

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Genetics plays a strong role in how people explore the environmen­t visually, says a study that tracked the eye movement of twins. “People recognise that gaze is important,” said Daniel Kennedy, Assistant Professor at Indiana University Bloomingto­n College of Arts and Sciences in the US.

“Our eyes are moving constantly, roughly three times per second. We are always seeking out informatio­n and actively engaged with our environmen­t, and ultimately where you look affects your developmen­t,” Kennedy said.

The researcher­s compared the eye movements of 466 children 233 pairs of twins (119 identical and 114 fraternal) between ages 9 and 14 as each child looked at 80 snapshots of scenes people might encounter in daily life, half of which included people.

Using an eye tracker, the researcher­s then measured the sequence of eye movements in both space and time as each child looked at the scene. Published in the journal Current Biology, the study found a strong similarity in gaze patterns within sets of identical twins, who tended to look at the same features of a scene in the same order.

It found a weaker but still pro- nounced similarity between fraternal twins. This suggests a strong genetic component to the way individual­s visually explore their environmen­ts. The more robust similarity in the eye movements of identical twins is likely due to their shared genetic makeup, the researcher­s said. “Eye movements allow individual­s to obtain specific informatio­n from a space that is vast and largely unconstrai­ned. It’s through this selection process that we end up shaping our visual experience­s,” Kennedy said.

 ??  ?? Strong similarity in gaze patterns within sets of identical twins says study.
Strong similarity in gaze patterns within sets of identical twins says study.

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