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Perceptual narrowing in face- and speech-perception domains in infancy: A longitudinal approach
Affiliation:1. Giessen University, Germany;2. Potsdam University, Germany;1. Max Planck Research Group Naturalistic Social Cognition, Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Lentzeallee 94, 14195, Berlin, Germany;2. Laboratory of Developmental Neuroscience, Università Campus Bio-Medico, Via Alvaro de Portillo 5, 00128, Rome, Italy;1. Crane Center for Early Childhood Research and Policy, The Ohio State University, United States;2. College of Nursing, University of Cincinnati, United States;3. College of Public Health, The Ohio State University, United States;1. Division of Counseling and Psychology in Education, University of South Dakota, United States;2. Center for Brain and Behavior Research, University of South Dakota, United States;3. Department of Applied Psychology and Human Development, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, University of Toronto, United States
Abstract:During the first year of life, infants undergo a process known as perceptual narrowing, which reduces their sensitivity to classes of stimuli which the infants do not encounter in their environment. It has been proposed that perceptual narrowing for faces and speech may be driven by shared domain-general processes. To investigate this theory, our study longitudinally tested 50 German Caucasian infants with respect to these domains first at 6 months of age followed by a second testing at 9 months of age. We used an infant-controlled habituation-dishabituation paradigm to test the infants’ ability to discriminate among other-race Asian faces and non-native Cantonese speech tones, as well as same-race Caucasian faces as a control. We found that while at 6 months of age infants could discriminate among all stimuli, by 9 months of age they could no longer discriminate among other-race faces or non-native tones. However, infants could discriminate among same-race stimuli both at 6 and at 9 months of age. These results demonstrate that the same infants undergo perceptual narrowing for both other-race faces and non-native speech tones between the ages of 6 and 9 months. This parallel development of perceptual narrowing occurring in both the face and speech perception modalities over the same period of time lends support to the domain-general theory of perceptual narrowing in face and speech perception.
Keywords:Face perception  Speech perception  Longitudinal  Infant  Perceptual narrowing
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