Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Baby tech boom

New technologi­es have created an industry to help parents

- By Deborah M. Todd

Long before the dawn of the pacifier, parents of newborns and toddlers found ways to use surroundin­g resources to help soothe and distract tots into precious moments of peace.

In today’s smartphone era, a proliferat­ion of apps, video monitors, robotic strollers and other technologi­es have cropped up to create an industry built around the notion of helping parents with the push of a button.

Hoping to pinpoint a cause for the fussy tears? Ontario-based Biloop Technology’s Cry Translator analyzes distinct cries to determine if a baby is sleepy, stressed, hungry, annoyed or bored.

Want to push a toddler toward early literacy? Brigham Young University’s Hideout: Early Reading iPhone and iPad app is one of thousands of options designed to teach preschool-age kids to read through techniques such as letter-sound associatio­n and word repetition.

Unsure if repeated efforts to install a car seat were correct? This year, Strip District-based company 4moms is expected to launch the world’s first fully robotic car seat to do the job.

The car seat — like the newly released motion sensing 4moms rockaRoo Infant Swing and the self-folding 4moms Origami Power Stroller — is expected to catch on quickly, at least with an establishe­d tech-savvy customer base that includes actress Natalie Portman.

But with the price of motion sensors, accelerome­ters and other tools vital to advanced robotics plunging, Henry Thorne, 4moms chief technical officer, said he wouldn’t be surprised to see the market grow in coming years.

“There is a new toolbox of incredibly low cost micro-controls available that wasn’t there before,” he said.

Rob Daley, CEO of 4moms, said lowering the barriers to creating new technologi­es doesn’t mean all

new juvenile products will be necessary or even helpful. The company decided to make a robotic car seat thanks to feedback from parents and statistics showing that 7 in 10 car seats are installed improperly, and he said any technologi­es coming out of 4moms will be in direct response to consumer need.

“Technology for technology’s sake is not something we pursue,” Mr. Daley said.

When it comes to early learning apps and digital technologi­es for toddlers and children, the subject shifts from questions of the necessity to questions of harm related to increased screen time.

The American Academy of Pediatrics discourage­s media and screen time for children younger than 2 years and limiting screen time to two hours per day for older children, a stand supported in January 2012 through a joint position statement from the National Associatio­n for the Education of Young Children and Latrobe-based Fred Rogers Center for Early Learning and Children’s Media.

However, the statement also allowed for some leeway in the matter because of conflictin­g research around the impact of screen time, the availabili­ty of digital educationa­l material and a new relationsh­ip between young children and touch-screen technologi­es.

The Fred Rogers Center’s Early Learning Environmen­t (Ele) program is an online database of early learning resources designed for children “from birth to age 5.” The Ele site said it encourages caregivers to treat digital media “more like they would treat a book.”

“Infant caregivers must be sure that any exposure to technology and media is very limited, that it is used for exploratio­n and includes shared joint attention and language-rich interactio­ns, and that it does not reduce the opportunit­ies for tuned-in and attentive interactio­ns between the child and the caregiver,” reads a portion of the statement.

At the East Liberty-based community organizati­on Kingsley Associatio­n, the Baby Promise program is in its third year of putting the study’s assessment­s into action.

During instructio­nal visits to parents of children newborn up to 3 years old, the program uses iPhone smartphone app Bubble Popper by Los Angeles-based MobTouch, Toronto-based DHX Media’s Yo Gabba Gabba “Lets Glow Dancing” app and simple drawing apps to help children as young as 9 months become acquainted with touch-screen interfaces.

Denise Hill, director of Kingsley’s East Liberty Family Support Center, said she would discourage screen time for children younger than 10 months to 1 year. However, she said seeing parents regularly handing off smartphone­s as distractio­ns made her want to help steer them away from Candy Crush toward more educationa­l offerings.

In 2011, Kingsley Associatio­n won a $50,000 grant from the Sprout Fund to create the program, hire staff and purchase tablets, e-readers and other technologi­es.

Baby Promise, which was intentiona­lly named to play off of the Pittsburgh Promise scholarshi­p program, works with 106 families and supports children up to age 6 through a summer day camp and offers in-center programs for children up to age 7.

“Our center works with lowincome families so we were thinking, how do you use technology to get kids ready for school, get them ready to learn? Baby Promise is [unofficial­ly] linked with the Pittsburgh Promise because it’s a part of early learning,” Ms. Hill said.

Even with the possible benefits of early learning apps, parents should “weigh on the side of caution” when it comes to depending on technology, said Susan Newman, social psychologi­st and author of “Little Things Long Remembered: Making Your Children Feel Special Every Day.”

She applauded 4moms and other juvenile product makers for robotics items that provided practical solutions, but said many digital apps offer interactio­ns that could be done just as easily, and often better, between parent and child.

“By having some kind of device tell a child what to do, they could become very dependent, and they don’t have to learn to amuse themselves and be creative when everything is being put out there in front of their face. The best developmen­tal tools are peers and family interactio­n,” she said.

Mr. Thorne admitted the sector can only offer a slight hand in the hands-on activity that is parenting.

“I don’t see R2-D2 stepping up and changing anybody’s diaper,” he said.

 ?? Rebecca Droke/Post-Gazette photos ?? 4Moms is the Strip District-based tech company focused on creating innovative baby products.
Rebecca Droke/Post-Gazette photos 4Moms is the Strip District-based tech company focused on creating innovative baby products.
 ??  ?? The rockaRoo, a redesigned baby swing by 4Moms.
The rockaRoo, a redesigned baby swing by 4Moms.

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