Literature DB >> 18605829

Infant discrimination of faces in naturalistic events: actions are more salient than faces.

Lorraine E Bahrick1, Lisa C Newell.   

Abstract

Despite the fact that faces are typically seen in the context of dynamic events, there is little research on infants' perception of moving faces. L. E. Bahrick, L. J. Gogate, and I. Ruiz (2002) demonstrated that 5-month-old infants discriminate and remember repetitive actions but not the faces of the women performing the actions. The present research tested an attentional salience explanation for these findings: that dynamic faces are discriminable to infants, but more salient actions compete for attention. Results demonstrated that 5-month-old infants discriminated faces in the context of actions when they had longer familiarization time (Experiment 1) and following habituation to a single person performing 3 different activities (Experiment 2). Further, 7-month-old infants who have had more experience with social events also discriminated faces in the context of actions. Overall, however, discrimination of actions was more robust and occurred earlier in processing time than discrimination of dynamic faces. These findings support an attentional salience hypothesis and indicate that faces are not special in the context of actions in early infancy.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18605829      PMCID: PMC2738585          DOI: 10.1037/0012-1649.44.4.983

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Psychol        ISSN: 0012-1649


  48 in total

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5.  Attention and memory for faces and actions in infancy: the salience of actions over faces in dynamic events.

Authors:  Lorraine E Bahrick; Lakshmi J Gogate; Ivonne Ruiz
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6.  Infants parse dynamic action.

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  17 in total

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2.  The effects of intersensory redundancy on attention and memory: infants' long-term memory for orientation in audiovisual events.

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7.  Prelinguistic foundations of verb learning: Infants discriminate and categorize dynamic human actions.

Authors:  Lulu Song; Shannon M Pruden; Roberta Michnick Golinkoff; Kathy Hirsh-Pasek
Journal:  J Exp Child Psychol       Date:  2016-03-09

8.  Intersensory redundancy promotes infant detection of prosody in infant-directed speech.

Authors:  Lorraine E Bahrick; Myriah E McNew; Shannon M Pruden; Irina Castellanos
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9.  Infants Discriminate the Affective Expressions of their Peers: The Roles of Age and Familiarization Time.

Authors:  Ross Flom; Lorraine E Bahrick; Anne D Pick
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10.  The development of face perception in infancy: intersensory interference and unimodal visual facilitation.

Authors:  Lorraine E Bahrick; Robert Lickliter; Irina Castellanos
Journal:  Dev Psychol       Date:  2012-12-17
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