Literature DB >> 15320379

The dynamics of infant visual foraging.

Steven S Robertson1, John Guckenheimer, Amy M Masnick, Leigh F Bacher.   

Abstract

Human infants actively forage for visual information from the moment of birth onward. Although we know a great deal about how stimulus characteristics influence looking behavior in the first few postnatal weeks, we know much less about the intrinsic dynamics of the behavior. Here we show that a simple stochastic dynamical system acts quantitatively like 4-week-old infants on a range of measures if there is hysteresis in the transitions between looking and looking away in the model system. The success of this simple three-parameter model suggests that visual foraging in the first few weeks after birth may be influenced more by noise and hysteresis in underlying neural mechanisms than by how infants process visual information after a look begins.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15320379     DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-7687.2004.00338.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Sci        ISSN: 1363-755X


  6 in total

1.  The Infant Orienting With Attention task: Assessing the neural basis of spatial attention in infancy.

Authors:  Shannon Ross-Sheehy; Sebastian Schneegans; John P Spencer
Journal:  Infancy       Date:  2015 Sep-Oct

2.  Stronger neural dynamics capture changes in infants' visual working memory capacity over development.

Authors:  Sammy Perone; Vanessa R Simmering; John P Spencer
Journal:  Dev Sci       Date:  2011-09-17

3.  Autonomy in action: linking the act of looking to memory formation in infancy via dynamic neural fields.

Authors:  Sammy Perone; John P Spencer
Journal:  Cogn Sci       Date:  2012-11-08

4.  Temporal Dependency and the Structure of Early Looking.

Authors:  Daniel S Messinger; Whitney I Mattson; James Torrence Todd; Devon N Gangi; Nicholas D Myers; Lorraine E Bahrick
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-01-11       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 5.  Studying the Developing Brain in Real-World Contexts: Moving From Castles in the Air to Castles on the Ground.

Authors:  Sam V Wass; Louise Goupil
Journal:  Front Integr Neurosci       Date:  2022-07-13

6.  What you see is what you get: contextual modulation of face scanning in typical and atypical development.

Authors:  Mayada Elsabbagh; Rachael Bedford; Atsushi Senju; Tony Charman; Andrew Pickles; Mark H Johnson
Journal:  Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci       Date:  2013-02-05       Impact factor: 3.436

  6 in total

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