| Literature DB >> 31301066 |
Francesco Pavani1,2, Marta Venturini1, Francesca Baruffaldi3, Maria Cristina Caselli4, Wieske van Zoest1,5.
Abstract
The susceptibility to gaze cueing in deaf children aged 7-14 years old (N = 16) was tested using a nonlinguistic task. Participants performed a peripheral shape-discrimination task, whereas uninformative central gaze cues validly or invalidly cued the location of the target. To assess the role of sign language experience and bilingualism in deaf participants, three groups of age-matched hearing children were recruited: bimodal bilinguals (vocal and sign-language, N = 19), unimodal bilinguals (two vocal languages, N = 17), and monolinguals (N = 14). Although all groups showed a gaze-cueing effect and were faster to respond to validly than invalidly cued targets, this effect was twice as large in deaf participants. This result shows that atypical sensory experience can tune the saliency of a fundamental social cue.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31301066 DOI: 10.1111/cdev.13284
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Child Dev ISSN: 0009-3920