Literature DB >> 24990627

The Goldilocks effect in infant auditory attention.

Celeste Kidd1, Steven T Piantadosi, Richard N Aslin.   

Abstract

Infants must learn about many cognitive domains (e.g., language, music) from auditory statistics, yet capacity limits on their cognitive resources restrict the quantity that they can encode. Previous research has established that infants can attend to only a subset of available acoustic input. Yet few previous studies have directly examined infant auditory attention, and none have directly tested theorized mechanisms of attentional selection based on stimulus complexity. This work utilizes model-based behavioral methods that were recently developed to examine visual attention in infants (e.g., Kidd, Piantadosi, & Aslin, 2012). The present results demonstrate that 7- to 8-month-old infants selectively attend to nonsocial auditory stimuli that are intermediately predictable/complex with respect to their current implicit beliefs and expectations. These findings provide evidence of a broad principle of infant attention across modalities and suggest that sound-to-sound transitional statistics heavily influence the allocation of auditory attention in human infants.
© 2014 The Authors. Child Development © 2014 Society for Research in Child Development, Inc.

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Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24990627      PMCID: PMC4807134          DOI: 10.1111/cdev.12263

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Child Dev        ISSN: 0009-3920


  16 in total

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Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  1972-03

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Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  1976-03

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Review 7.  Habituation in the human infant.

Authors:  W E Jeffrey; L S Cohen
Journal:  Adv Child Dev Behav       Date:  1971

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10.  The Goldilocks effect: human infants allocate attention to visual sequences that are neither too simple nor too complex.

Authors:  Celeste Kidd; Steven T Piantadosi; Richard N Aslin
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-05-23       Impact factor: 3.240

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  31 in total

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9.  Infant learning: Historical, conceptual, and methodological challenges.

Authors:  Richard N Aslin
Journal:  Infancy       Date:  2014 Jan-Feb

Review 10.  The Psychology and Neuroscience of Curiosity.

Authors:  Celeste Kidd; Benjamin Y Hayden
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