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Learning unfamiliar faces in infants: The advantage of the regular sequence presentation and the three‐quarter view superiority
Author(s) -
NAKATO EMI,
KANAZAWA SO,
YAMAGUCHI MASAMI K.
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
japanese psychological research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.392
H-Index - 30
eISSN - 1468-5884
pISSN - 0021-5368
DOI - 10.1111/j.1468-5884.2010.00441.x
Subject(s) - quarter (canadian coin) , psychology , novelty , sequence (biology) , face (sociological concept) , contrast (vision) , developmental psychology , social psychology , artificial intelligence , computer science , linguistics , philosophy , genetics , archaeology , biology , history
We investigated the effect of the regular sequence of different views and the three‐quarter view effect on the learning of unfamiliar faces by infants. 3–8‐month‐old infants were familiarized with unfamiliar female faces in either the regular condition (presenting 11 different face views from the frontal view to the left‐side profile view in regular order) or the random condition (presenting the same 11 different face views in random order). Following the familiarization, infants were tested with a pair of a familiarized and a novel female face either in a three‐quarter (Experiment 1) or in a profile view (Experiment 2). Results showed that only 6–8‐month‐old infants could identify a familiarized face in the regular condition when they were tested in three‐quarter views. In contrast, 6–8‐month‐old infants showed no significant novelty preference in profile views. The results suggest that the regular sequence of different face views promotes the learning of unfamiliar faces by infants over 6 months old. Moreover, our findings imply that the three‐quarter view effect appears in infants.

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