Poor air quality is associated with impaired visual cognition in the first two years of life: A longitudinal investigation

  1. John P Spencer  Is a corresponding author
  2. Samuel H Forbes
  3. Sophie Naylor
  4. Vinay P Singh
  5. Kiara Jackson
  6. Sean Deoni
  7. Madhuri Tiwari
  8. Aarti Kumar
  1. School of Psychology, University of East Anglia, United Kingdom
  2. Department of Psychology, Durham University, United Kingdom
  3. Community Empowerment Lab, India
  4. Department of Pediatrics, Brown University, United States
3 figures, 11 tables and 6 additional files

Figures

Variations in infants’ cognitive performance.

(A) A schematic of the visual cognition task. (B) An infant performing the task. (C) The 6-month-old cohort (N = 107) had lower ‘first-look no-change’ change preference scores relative to the 9-month-old cohort (N = 106). (D) Infants showed higher change preference scores in the low memory load condition (N = 210) relative to the medium (N = 208) and high loads (N = 209). (E) Infants had faster visual processing speed (higher shift rates) in the low load condition (N = 206) relative to the medium (N = 206) and high loads (N = 205). (F) Standardized composite scores from the Mullen Scales of Early Learning (MSEL) in year 1 were higher for high SES infants (N = 97) than for low SES infants (N = 112). (G) Problem-solving scores from the Ages and Stages Questionnaire (ASQ) in year 2 were higher for high SES infants (N = 84) than for low SES infants (N = 96). Note that for F and G, a continuous SES score based on the Kuppuswamy Scale (see Mohd Saleem, 2020) was used in analysis, but this was median-split for ease of visualization. Line in boxplots shows the median, lower and upper hinges show the first and third quartiles, lower and upper whiskers extend to the smallest and largest point no more than 1.5 * the interquartile range from the closest hinge respectively, and data beyond teh whiskers are outlying and are plotted individually.

Variations in in-home air quality (PM2.5) by year, by day, and by type of cooking fuel.

(A) Three examples of in-home sensor placement for households of varying SES levels. (B) Variations in in-home air quality over years in the study (participants contributing data = 215). Black dots show mean air quality index over each 3-day assessment period with standard errors indicating variability over households collected on the same day. Black line shows our model fit through these data. Red line shows best-fitting curve from outdoor air quality observations recorded in Lucknow, India. (C) Daily variations in in-home air quality with peaks at meal preparation times (participants contributing data = 215). Points indicate raw data (with standard errors), the line indicates our model fit. (D) Plots showing poorer in-home air quality for households that used cow dung for cooking fuel (N = 25) relative to wood (N = 152) and liquified petroleum gas (LPG; N = 38). Boxplot details are same as in Figure 1.

Poor air quality is associated with impaired visual cognition in infancy.

(A) Infants from households with better air quality (lower AQI scores) had higher visual working memory scores in year 1 (see dark purple line; N = 199) relative to effects in year 2 (pink line; N = 179). (B) Infants from households with better air quality (lower AQI scores) also had faster visual processing speeds (higher shift rates; N = 213). Dots in both panels show raw data, line indicates linear trend with the ribbon indicating the 95% confidence interval.

Tables

Table 1
Proportional distribution of key demographic indices for families classified as high versus low SES based on a median split of family SES measured using the modified Kuppuswamy scale.
Electricity? Income* Cooking Fuel High SES Low SES
No Low Cow dung 0.02 0.06
Wood 0.02 0.25
LPG 0.01 0.01
Medium Cow dung 0.01 0.02
Wood 0.04 0.19
LPG 0.00 0.00
High Cow dung 0.00 0.00
Wood 0.03 0.08
LPG 0.01 0.00
Yes Low Cow dung 0.04 0.01
Wood 0.08 0.10
LPG 0.04 0.01
Medium Cow dung 0.03 0.02
Wood 0.17 0.17
LPG 0.02 0.00
High Cow dung 0.02 0.01
Wood 0.22 0.06
LPG 0.26 0.02
  1. *

    Incomes ranged from ₹8000 to ₹480,000 with tertile divisions at ₹45,000 and ₹72,720.

Table 2
Baseline model for the change preference scores.

Model parameters for linear mixed effect model assessing the impact of year, load, SES score based on the Kuppuswamy scale, age cohort, and visual dynamics in LookingWindow1 on the ‘first-look no-change’ change preference scores (baseline change preference model).

Variable Estimate Std. Error DF t value Pr(>|t|)
(Intercept) 0.488 0.054 534.793 9.062 <0.001
Year –0.044 0.107 742.433 –0.411 0.681
Load1 0.029 0.009 857.116 3.130 0.002
Load2 –0.001 0.009 854.106 –0.114 0.909
SES –0.006 0.013 527.033 –0.417 0.677
LookingWindow1 –0.067 0.065 548.916 –1.038 0.300
Age 0.027 0.014 183.400 1.913 0.057
Year:SES 0.036 0.027 715.570 1.350 0.177
Year:LookingWindow1 0.075 0.129 731.071 0.582 0.561
SES:LookingWindow1 0.006 0.016 532.948 0.381 0.704
Year:SES:LookingWindow1 –0.054 0.033 710.951 –1.665 0.096
Table 3
Model parameters for linear mixed effect model assessing the impact of year, load, SES and age cohort on the shift rate (baseline visual processing speed model).
Variable Estimate Std. Error DF t value Pr(>|t|)
(Intercept) 0.631 0.014 196.30 45.260 <0.001
Year 0.016 0.017 893.40 0.963 0.336
Load1 0.040 0.011 812.80 3.485 <0.001
Load2 0.001 0.011 811.70 0.071 0.943
SES 0.002 0.003 207.00 0.545 0.587
Age 0.012 0.028 195.80 0.429 0.668
Year:SES –0.007 0.004 928.20 –1.553 0.121
Table 4
Model parameters for linear models describing effects of age cohort and SES on standardized cognitive scores (baseline standardized cognitive models).

Measures included are MSEL composite T-score and ASQ problem solving score.

Measure Variable Estimate Std. Error t value Pr(>|t|)
Mullen Composite (Intercept) 101.299 0.960 105.562 <0.001
Age –0.345 1.920 –0.180 0.857
SES 0.769 0.232 3.308 0.001
ASQ Problem Solving (Intercept) 30.581 0.955 32.032 <0.001
Age 5.549 1.909 2.907 0.004
SES 0.923 0.231 3.998 <0.001
Table 5
Model parameters for linear models assessing the baseline variability of SES, cooking fuel, and age cohort on the air quality reading (baseline air quality models).
Model Variable Estimate Std. Error t value Pr(>|t|)
Cooking Fuel (Intercept) 1.461 2.767 0.528 0.598
Cooking Fuel1 10.866 4.517 2.405 0.017
Cooking Fuel2 –1.519 3.119 –0.487 0.627
Age –0.548 4.213 –0.13 0.897
SES (Intercept) –0.004 2.099 –0.002 0.999
SES –1.152 0.511 –2.255 0.025
Age –1.714 4.198 –0.408 0.683
Table 6
Model parameters for linear mixed-effect model assessing the impact of air quality (AQI) on the baseline change preference score model which included Year, Load, SES, Age Cohort, and LookingWindow1 as predictors (see Table 2).
Variable Estimate Std. Error DF t value Pr(>|t|)
(Intercept) 0.494 0.054 535.80 9.186 <0.001
Year –0.044 0.107 741.90 –0.411 0.681
Load1 0.029 0.009 858.10 3.135 0.002
Load2 –0.001 0.009 855.20 –0.124 0.901
SES –0.009 0.014 524.70 –0.663 0.508
LookingWindow1 –0.075 0.065 549.90 –1.155 0.249
Age 0.026 0.014 184.70 1.810 0.072
AQI 0.000 0.000 181.80 –0.654 0.514
Year:SES 0.040 0.027 720.10 1.471 0.142
Year:LookingWindow1 0.075 0.128 730.70 0.585 0.559
SES:LookingWindow1 0.010 0.016 530.80 0.607 0.544
Year:AQI 0.001 0.000 965.10 2.431 0.015
Year:SES:LookingWindow1 –0.057 0.033 714.90 –1.750 0.080
Table 7
Model parameters for linear mixed-effect model assessing the impact of air quality (AQI) on the baseline visual processing speed (shift rate) model which included Year, Load, SES, and Age Cohort as predictors (see Table 3).
Variable Estimate Std. Error DF t value Pr(>|t|)
(Intercept) 0.631 0.014 195.40 45.655 <0.001
Year 0.016 0.017 894.50 0.977 0.329
Load1 0.040 0.011 813.20 3.501 <0.001
Load2 0.001 0.011 812.10 0.045 0.964
SES 0.001 0.003 205.10 0.225 0.823
Age 0.009 0.028 195.30 0.318 0.750
AQI 0.001 0.000 192.10 2.166 0.032
Year:SES –0.006 0.004 928.60 –1.493 0.136
Table 8
Model parameters for linear model assessing the impact of air quality (AQI) on the baseline Mullen model (Composite T-Score) which included Age Cohort and SES as predictors (see Table 4).
Variable Estimate Std. Error t value Pr(>|t|)
(Intercept) 101.301 0.961 105.398 <0.001
Age –0.377 1.923 –0.196 0.845
SES 0.746 0.236 3.163 0.002
AQI –0.019 0.032 –0.596 0.552
Table 9
Model parameters for linear models assessing the impact of air quality (AQI) on the baseline ASQ model which included Age Cohort and SES as predictors (see Table 4).

For comparison with prior work, we include analyses of the ASQ Problem Solving score as well as Fine and Gross Motor scores.

Measure Variable Estimate Std. Error t value Pr(>|t|)
ASQ Problem Solving (Intercept) 30.563 0.955 32.004 <0.001
Age 5.617 1.910 2.941 0.004
SES 0.890 0.233 3.817 <0.001
AQI –0.030 0.031 –0.983 0.327
ASQ Fine Motor (Intercept) 34.224 1.039 32.944 <0.001
Age 5.655 2.078 2.721 0.007
SES 0.815 0.254 3.214 0.002
AQI –0.025 0.033 –0.748 0.455
ASQ Gross Motor (Intercept) 36.849 1.061 34.733 <0.001
Age 8.221 2.122 3.874 <0.001
SES 0.571 0.259 2.206 0.029
AQI –0.054 0.034 –1.582 0.115
Table 10
Model parameters from the baseline mixed-effects model assessing the effects of Year, Load, SES, LookingWindow1 and Age cohort on the first look change measure.
Variable Estimate Std. Error DF t value Pr(>|t|)
(Intercept) 0.592 0.054 613.50 11.009 <0.001
Year 0.030 0.013 966.10 2.353 0.019
Load1 0.000 0.009 846.40 0.024 0.981
Load2 0.002 0.009 847.40 0.175 0.861
SES 0.002 0.002 205.30 0.874 0.383
LookingWindow1 0.057 0.065 628.30 0.882 0.378
Age –0.019 0.015 188.80 –1.331 0.185
Table 11
Model parameters assessing the impact of air quality (AQI) on the baseline mixed-effects model assessing the effects of Year, Load, SES, LookingWindow1 and Age cohort on the first look change measure.
Variable Estimate Std. Error DF t value Pr(>|t|)
(Intercept) 0.589 0.054 612.30 10.944 <0.001
Year 0.030 0.013 967.10 2.395 0.017
Load1 0.000 0.009 847.40 –0.008 0.994
Load2 0.002 0.009 848.30 0.182 0.855
SES 0.002 0.002 205.30 1.105 0.270
LookingWindow1 0.062 0.065 626.90 0.952 0.341
Age –0.018 0.014 189.50 –1.275 0.204
AQI 0.000 0.000 185.80 1.263 0.208
Year:AQI –0.001 0.000 968.20 –1.402 0.161

Additional files

Supplementary file 1

Correlation table showing pairwise correlations for the key measures from the present study.

AQI = air quality index; SES = SES score from the Kuppuswamy scale; PropC = ‘first-look change’ change preference score; PropNC = ‘first-look no-change’ change preference score; SR = shift rate. First index number indicates load (1=Low, 2=Medium, 3=High) and second index number indicates year (1 or 2). Colors reflect the strength of the correlation (see bar).

https://cdn.elifesciences.org/articles/83876/elife-83876-supp1-v1.docx
Supplementary file 2

Model assessing impact of air quality on change preference scores controlling for shift rate.

Model parameters for linear mixed-effect model assessing the impact of air quality (AQI) on the baseline change preference score model which included Year, Load, SES, Age Cohort, and LookingWindow1 as predictors, controlling for the shift rate (see Table 6).

https://cdn.elifesciences.org/articles/83876/elife-83876-supp2-v1.docx
Supplementary file 3

Model assessing the impact of air quality on shift rate controlling for change preference scores.

Model parameters for linear mixed-effect model assessing the impact of air quality (AQI) on the baseline visual processing speed (shift rate) model which included Year, Load, SES, and Age Cohort as predictors, controlling for the change preference score (see Table 7).

https://cdn.elifesciences.org/articles/83876/elife-83876-supp3-v1.docx
Supplementary file 4

Model parameters from linear model examining the effects of air quality on a change preference model in set size 2 only, across both years.

Parameters include year, SES, Looking window 1 and age cohort.

https://cdn.elifesciences.org/articles/83876/elife-83876-supp4-v1.docx
Supplementary file 5

Full set of assessments carried out in Project INDIA (Infant Neural and Dyadic Interaction Assessment).

https://cdn.elifesciences.org/articles/83876/elife-83876-supp5-v1.docx
MDAR checklist
https://cdn.elifesciences.org/articles/83876/elife-83876-mdarchecklist1-v1.docx

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  1. John P Spencer
  2. Samuel H Forbes
  3. Sophie Naylor
  4. Vinay P Singh
  5. Kiara Jackson
  6. Sean Deoni
  7. Madhuri Tiwari
  8. Aarti Kumar
(2023)
Poor air quality is associated with impaired visual cognition in the first two years of life: A longitudinal investigation
eLife 12:e83876.
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.83876