The development of preferences for own-race versus other-race faces in 3-, 6- and 9-month-old Caucasian infants |
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Authors: | Ina Fassbender Manuel Teubert Arnold Lohaus |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, University of Bielefeld, Germany |
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Abstract: | Visual preferences for pairs of African and Caucasian faces were repeatedly assessed in 3-, 6- and 9-month-old Caucasian infants with a preferential looking paradigm. Two different patterns of preference development were found: First, the spontaneous own-race preference at three months reported in the literature tilts to a preference for other-race faces at nine months passing through a null-preference at six months. This replicates the pattern recently reported for Asian infants [Liu et al. (2015). Development of visual preference for own- versus other-race faces in infancy. Developmental Psychology. doi:10.1037/a0038835]. Second, at all three ages fixation time towards Caucasian faces significantly reduces across the consecutive trial presentation. This is a similar effect as in novelty preference studies to occur after a sufficiently long familiarization phase. Both patterns can be explained in terms of an advantaged own-race face processing with the emerging Other-Race-Effect. |
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Keywords: | Face preferences Visual preferences Other-race effect Preferential looking paradigm Infancy |
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