Literature DB >> 16540101

Direct gaze modulates face recognition in young infants.

Teresa Farroni1, Stefano Massaccesi, Enrica Menon, Mark H Johnson.   

Abstract

From birth, infants prefer to look at faces that engage them in direct eye contact. In adults, direct gaze is known to modulate the processing of faces, including the recognition of individuals. In the present study, we investigate whether direction of gaze has any effect on face recognition in four-month-old infants. Four-month infants were shown faces with both direct and averted gaze, and subsequently given a preference test involving the same face and a novel one. A novelty preference during test was only found following initial exposure to a face with direct gaze. Further, face recognition was also generally enhanced for faces with both direct and with averted gaze when the infants started the task with the direct gaze condition. Together, these results indicate that the direction of the gaze modulates face recognition in early infancy.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16540101     DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2006.01.007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cognition        ISSN: 0010-0277


  29 in total

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8.  Impaired eye contact in the FMR1 premutation is not associated with social anxiety or the broad autism phenotype.

Authors:  Jessica Klusek; Alexis Ruber; Jane E Roberts
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9.  Affective responses by adults with autism are reduced to social images but elevated to images related to circumscribed interests.

Authors:  Noah J Sasson; Gabriel S Dichter; James W Bodfish
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10.  Social perception in the infant brain: gamma oscillatory activity in response to eye gaze.

Authors:  Tobias Grossmann; Mark H Johnson; Teresa Farroni; Gergely Csibra
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