Literature DB >> 30858645

Experimental Evidence of Structural Representation of Hands in Early Infancy.

Rachel Jubran1, Hannah White1, Alyson Chroust1, Alison Heck1, Ramesh S Bhatt1.   

Abstract

Hands convey important social information, such as an individual's emotions, goals, and desires, are used to direct attention through pointing, and are a major organ for haptic perception. However, very little is known about infants' representation of human hands. In Experiment 1, infants tested in a familiarization/novelty preference task discriminated between images of intact hands and ones that contained first-order structure distortions (i.e., with locations of fingers altered to result in an unnatural configuration). In Experiment 2, infants tested in a spontaneous preference task exhibited a preference for scrambled hand images over intact images, indicating that 3.5-month-olds have gained sufficient sensitivity to the configural properties of hands to discriminate between intact versus scrambled images without any training in the laboratory. In both procedures, infants' performance was disrupted by inversion of images, suggesting that infants' performance in the upright conditions was not based on low-level features. These results indicate that sensitivity to the structure of hands develops early in life. This early development may lay the foundation for the development of the functional use of hand information for social communication.

Entities:  

Keywords:  body part perception; infant hand identification; representation of hands; social perception

Year:  2018        PMID: 30858645      PMCID: PMC6407879          DOI: 10.1177/0165025418780360

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Behav Dev        ISSN: 0165-0254


  32 in total

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  2 in total

Review 1.  Importance of body representations in social-cognitive development: New insights from infant brain science.

Authors:  Andrew N Meltzoff; Peter J Marshall
Journal:  Prog Brain Res       Date:  2020-08-14       Impact factor: 2.453

2.  Body representation in infants: Categorical boundaries of body parts as assessed by somatosensory mismatch negativity.

Authors:  Guannan Shen; Andrew N Meltzoff; Staci M Weiss; Peter J Marshall
Journal:  Dev Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2020-05-11       Impact factor: 6.464

  2 in total

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