| Literature DB >> 27223687 |
Elizabeth A Simpson1, Krisztina V Jakobsen2, Fabrice Damon3, Stephen J Suomi4, Pier F Ferrari5, Annika Paukner4.
Abstract
In visually complex environments, numerous items compete for attention. Infants may exhibit attentional efficiency-privileged detection, attention capture, and holding-for face-like stimuli. However, it remains unknown when these biases develop and what role, if any, experience plays in this emerging skill. Here, nursery-reared infant macaques' (Macaca mulatta; n = 10) attention to faces in 10-item arrays of nonfaces was measured using eye tracking. With limited face experience, 3-week-old monkeys were more likely to detect faces and looked longer at faces compared to nonfaces, suggesting a robust face detection system. By 3 months, after peer exposure, infants looked faster to conspecific faces but not heterospecific faces, suggesting an own-species bias in face attention capture, consistent with perceptual attunement.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27223687 PMCID: PMC5123966 DOI: 10.1111/cdev.12565
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Child Dev ISSN: 0009-3920