Authors
Eve Dupierrix, Anne Hillairet de Boisferon, David Méary, Kang Lee, Paul C Quinn, Elisa Di Giorgio, Francesca Simion, Masaki Tomonaga, Olivier Pascalis
Publication date
2014/7/1
Journal
Journal of Experimental Child Psychology
Volume
123
Pages
138-146
Publisher
Academic Press
Description
Despite evidence supporting an early attraction to human faces, the nature of the face representation in neonates and its development during the first year after birth remain poorly understood. One suggestion is that an early preference for human faces reflects an attraction toward human eyes because human eyes are distinctive compared with other animals. In accord with this proposal, prior empirical studies have demonstrated the importance of the eye region in face processing in adults and infants. However, an attraction for the human eye has never been shown directly in infants. The current study aimed to investigate whether an attraction for human eyes would be present in newborns and older infants. With the use of a preferential looking time paradigm, newborns and 3-, 6-, 9-, and 12-month-olds were simultaneously presented with a pair of nonhuman primate faces (chimpanzees and Barbary macaques …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
E Dupierrix, AH de Boisferon, D Méary, K Lee… - Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2014