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Perceptual specialization and configural face processing in infancy
Authors:Nicole Zieber  Ashley Kangas  Alyson Hock  Angela Hayden  Rebecca Collins  Henrietta Bada  Jane E. Joseph  Ramesh S. Bhatt
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY 40506, USA;2. Department of Neurosciences, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC 29425, USA
Abstract:Adults’ face processing expertise includes sensitivity to second-order configural information (spatial relations among features such as distance between eyes). Prior research indicates that infants process this information in female faces. In the current experiments, 9-month-olds discriminated spacing changes in upright human male and monkey faces but not in inverted faces. However, they failed to process matching changes in upright house stimuli. A similar pattern of performance was exhibited by 5-month-olds. Thus, 5- and 9-month-olds exhibited specialization by processing configural information in upright primate faces but not in houses or inverted faces. This finding suggests that, even early in life, infants treat faces in a special manner by responding to changes in configural information more readily in faces than in non-face stimuli. However, previously reported differences in infants’ processing of human versus monkey faces at 9 months of age (but not at younger ages), which have been associated with perceptual narrowing, were not evident in the current study. Thus, perceptual narrowing is not absolute in the sense of loss of the ability to process information from other species’ faces at older ages.
Keywords:Face perception   Infancy   Configural processing   Perceptual narrowing   Face specialization   Second-order spatial relations
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