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Infants Experience Perceptual Narrowing for Nonprimate Faces
Author(s) -
Simpson Elizabeth A.,
Varga Krisztina,
Frick Janet E.,
Fragaszy Dorothy
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
infancy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.361
H-Index - 69
eISSN - 1532-7078
pISSN - 1525-0008
DOI - 10.1111/j.1532-7078.2010.00052.x
Subject(s) - psychology , perception , primate , face perception , ovis , visual perception , preference , developmental psychology , audiology , biology , neuroscience , medicine , ecology , economics , microeconomics
Perceptual narrowing—a phenomenon in which perception is broad from birth, but narrows as a function of experience—has previously been tested with primate faces. In the first 6 months of life, infants can discriminate among individual human and monkey faces. Though the ability to discriminate monkey faces is lost after about 9 months, infants retain human face discrimination, presumably because of their experience with human faces. The current study demonstrates that 4‐ to 6‐month‐old infants are able to discriminate nonprimate faces as well. In a visual paired comparison test, 4‐ to 6‐month‐old infants ( n = 26) looked significantly longer at novel sheep ( Ovis aries ) faces, compared to a familiar sheep face ( p = .017), while 9‐ to 11‐month‐olds ( n = 26) showed no visual preference, and adults ( n = 27) had a familiarity preference ( p < .001). Infants’ face recognition systems are broadly tuned at birth—not just for primate faces, but for nonprimate faces as well—allowing infants to become specialists in recognizing the types of faces encountered in their first year of life.