An Investigation of the Physiological Basis of Curiosity in Young Children and Adults

Lead Research Organisation: Lancaster University
Department Name: Psychology

Abstract

Humans across all developmental stages exhibit pervasive curiosity-driven behaviours to seek and acquire new information. From very early on in life, young infants are sensitive to novelty in their environment and they actively and constantly explore their surroundings through their eyes and body. Adults spend time reading books, engaging with puzzles and quizzes as well as other information- seeking activities (e.g., gossip) without apparent incentives. Driven by curiosity, scientists take expeditions to discover the unknown. They dive into the deepest ocean on earth to unravel mysteries of the deep sea and have invented the Curiosity Rover for exploring the unknown space on Mars. Curiosity as an inner need for knowledge not only facilitates and shapes human cognitive development but also expands our knowledge boundaries and inspires innovation and discovery. As a key driver of cognitive development, curiosity promotes exploration, boosts learning and enhances memory. Much research suggests a few reasons for this enhancing effect including prior knowledge, curiosity anticipation and curiosity resolution. For example, when curiosity is piqued by an unsolved quiz that one might know something about, the anticipation of the answer to the quiz and the answer to the quiz (i.e., curiosity resolution) are thought to be crucial in advancing learning. In other words, the degree to which curiosity is elicited depends on an individual's prior knowledge, and once curiosity is elicited, it may create a state of anticipation, setting up a 'ready-to-learn' mode for a learner to learn, motivating the learner to explore and seek information.
The key finding of my PhD thesis indeed shows that curiosity elicitation is associated with a certain arousal mechanism (the 'ready-to-learn' mode), resulting in an enhancing effect on learning, especially in young children. Most importantly, this finding has raised under-researched questions about the roles of physiological arousal and developmental change in curiosity-driven learning. Curiosity has been measured by adults' self-reporting, by infants' looking time to stimuli on a screen, by changes in pupil size, and specific brain responses to experienced information. To understand curiosity across development and in adults, new methods and analysis skills are needed. Therefore, in this Fellowship, I will apply these methods and learn new ones to conduct a follow-on study, focusing on examining the role of the physiological basis and exploring the developmental changes in curiosity-driven learning in young children and adults. More specifically, this project will involve eye-tracking, pupillometry and motion capture measures, providing a novel direction in the field by applying a multimethod approach to encapsulate the basic mechanism of curiosity, offering proof-of-concept evidence in my future ESRC New Investigator grant application.
Alongside the proposed project, during the Fellowship I will disseminate my findings to academic and non-academic audiences through conference presentations, peer-reviewed publications, lay summaries as well as outreach events for early-years practitioners and the public to generate regional, national and global impacts. The Fellowship will seek to raise awareness of the role of curiosity in cognition and education, bridging the gap between research, practice and the public, increasing the practical impacts of my research.
 
Description This award has given me the opportunity to publish my current PhD work and apply for further funding. Over the past year, I have published one first-author paper in a high-impact journal and two preprints, which are currently under review with two other renowned journals. I have applied for two fellowships to secure funding in 2024. Despite the unsuccessful attempts, I have gained experience with a full cycle of funding application. I have also designed a new study to investigate the physiological basis of curiosity in children and adults. The data collection for adult samples is completed and the data has been publicly shared on open science framework. The data collection with children sample is still ongoing and close to a full sample. Another purpose of this award was to engage with a wilder community with research collaborators and general public. For academic engagement, I have visited the Centre for Brain and Cognitive Development in February 2024 for a month to exchange knowledge and build collaboration network. Beyond this, I delivered two workshops to data scientists and developmental researchers to share my expertise in eye tracking and pupillometry methods. I also received extended training on fNIRS data analysis. For engagement with general public, I have organised and attended several events: demonstrated my research to the public at campus in the city (science to the public event), delivered a talk to local grammar school, held an practitioner event in the lab to network with early year practitioners.

The award objectives were met.

The key findings from the peer-reviewed publication can be advanced by researchers through further investigations across different populations and by exploring related factors. Furthermore, educators can translate these findings into practical strategies, and learners can adopt metacognitive approaches to enhance their own learning. Whereas, the analysis of the newly generated dataset (and ongoing data collection) is undergoing, as such the findings are not yet confirmed.
Exploitation Route Beyond the impact mentioned above, the newly generated dataset will provide valuable insights into the physiological responses of curiosity, helping researchers evaluate and refine existing theories. This project has the potential to introduce a novel research method in the field. Additionally, educators can translate these findings into practical teaching strategies, while learners can apply them to enhance their own learning experiences.
Sectors Education

Other

URL https://www.research.lancs.ac.uk/portal/en/upmprojects/nwssdtp-an-investigation-of-the-physiological-basis-of-curiosity-in-young-children-and-adults(0e7aa8ba-cb11-479b-8476-a8d2812753f7).html
 
Description Regarding non-academic impacts: The findings have been presented to early year practioners and local grammer schools. Through this, educators can translate these findings into practical teaching strategies, while learners (students) can apply them to enhance their own learning experiences.
First Year Of Impact 2024
Sector Education,Other
Impact Types Societal

Policy & public services

 
Description LuCiD travel award
Amount £5,000 (GBP)
Organisation International Centre for Language and Communicative Development 
Sector Academic/University
Country United Kingdom
Start 02/2024 
End 03/2024
 
Description ManyBabies 5 funding
Amount $2,500 (USD)
Organisation Princeton University 
Sector Academic/University
Country United States
Start 02/2025 
End 05/2026
 
Title ToCur_biopac_adult dataset 
Description Research dataset from a project measuring the physiological responses of curiosity in adults 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2025 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact This is by far the first shared research dataset on measuring the physiological responses of curioisty in adults 
URL https://osf.io/s2mkh/?view_only=bfb726a4b3344f09b0a4e86c2922bf9b
 
Description Campus in the City: When curiosity meets magic! 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact More than 1000 of citizens attended for this public engagement event where I demonstrated to local citizens about my research through interactive activities on how psychologists use eye tracking and EEG to understand curiosity about magic.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2024
URL https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CwypwCEEX74
 
Description Eye tracking and pupillometry with R for R-Ladies community 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Other audiences
Results and Impact Delivered a methodological and technical workshop on eye tracking and pupillometry with R to 30 data scientist from R-Ladies community in Lancaster.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2024
 
Description Knowledge Exchange for Lancashire County Council Network Of Outstanding Providers 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact About 20 lead practitioners from Lancashire County Council network of Outstanding providers visited to our research organisation, which helps bridging the gaps between research and frontline practice in child development. The practitioners reported great interests in our work and future collaborations.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2024
URL https://www.research.lancs.ac.uk/portal/en/activities/lab-tour-and-knowledge-exchange-for-lancashire...
 
Description Public talk: The Role of Technology in My Curiosity Quest. 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Local
Primary Audience Schools
Results and Impact More than 30 students from the Lancaster Girls' Grammar School attended this event where I talked about the role of technology in my research career development, which encouraged students interest in STEM subjects. The school reported positive feedback from students and requested whether I could host summer internships for their students.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2024
URL https://www.research.lancs.ac.uk/portal/en/activities/talk-the-role-of-technology-in-my-curiosity-qu...