Literature DB >> 27134573

Free Viewing Gaze Behavior in Infants and Adults.

John M Franchak1, David J Heeger2, Uri Hasson3, Karen E Adolph2.   

Abstract

The current study investigated age differences in free viewing gaze behavior. Adults and 6-, 9-, 12-, and 24-month-old infants watched a 60-s Sesame Street video clip while their eye movements were recorded. Adults displayed high inter-subject consistency in eye movements; they tended to fixate the same places at the same. Infants showed weaker consistency between observers and inter-subject consistency increased with age. Across age groups, the influence of both bottom-up features (fixating visually-salient areas) and top-down features (looking at faces) increased. Moreover, individual differences in fixating bottom-up and top-down features predicted whether infants' eye movements were consistent with those of adults, even when controlling for age. However, this relation was moderated by the number of faces available in the scene, suggesting that the development of adult-like viewing involves learning when to prioritize looking at bottom-up and top-down features.

Entities:  

Keywords:  attention; eye movements; face perception; inter-subject correlation; saliency; vision

Year:  2015        PMID: 27134573      PMCID: PMC4847438          DOI: 10.1111/infa.12119

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Infancy        ISSN: 1532-7078


  39 in total

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10.  An eye tracking investigation of developmental change in bottom-up attention orienting to faces in cluttered natural scenes.

Authors:  Dima Amso; Sara Haas; Julie Markant
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-01-22       Impact factor: 3.240

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  14 in total

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5.  See and be seen: Infant-caregiver social looking during locomotor free play.

Authors:  John M Franchak; Kari S Kretch; Karen E Adolph
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6.  Assessing individual differences in the speed and accuracy of intersensory processing in young children: The intersensory processing efficiency protocol.

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7.  Lawful tracking of visual motion in humans, macaques, and marmosets in a naturalistic, continuous, and untrained behavioral context.

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10.  Semantic content outweighs low-level saliency in determining children's and adults' fixation of movies.

Authors:  Andrew T Rider; Antoine Coutrot; Elizabeth Pellicano; Steven C Dakin; Isabelle Mareschal
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