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Attention of 4-month infants to discrepancy and babyishness
Authors:Robert B McCall  Cynthia Bellows Kennedy
Affiliation:Center for the Study of Youth Development, Boys Town, Nebraska, USA;Sinclair Community College, Dayton, Ohio, USA
Abstract:A set of four facial stimuli derived from the Bolton standards of craniofacial development representing a human male at 6 months, 3, 8, and 18 years of age were used in a test of Lorenz's concept of babyishness and of the discrepancy hypothesis. Each 4-month-old subject was habituated to a criterion with one of the four stimuli and then presented with one of the four as a new stimulus. The design and analysis permitted the response to a new stimulus to be broken down into a component attributable to the physical characteristics of the new stimulus and a part attributable to its discrepancy from the familiar standard. The data revealed longer looking at the infant facial stimulus, but no difference in a rating of affect accompanying fixation. This lent partial support to the babyishness concept for infant subjects. Both fixation and affect increased monotonically with magnitude of discrepancy. The increasing rather than curvilinear result presumably derived from the failure of these stimuli (which were common to the infant's experience) to generate extreme levels of subjective uncertainty.
Keywords:Requests for reprints should be sent to McCall at The Center for the Study of Youth Development   Boys Town   NE 68010.
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