Visual habituation in human infants: development and rearing circumstances |
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Authors: | Marc H. Bornstein Marie-Germaine Pêcheux Roger Lécuyer |
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Affiliation: | (1) Child and Family Research, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Building 31 — Room B2B15, 9000 Rockville Pike, 20892 Bethesda, MD, USA;(2) Laboratoire de Psychologie du Développement et de l'Éducation de l'Enfant, Paris, France |
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Abstract: | Summary Habituation is a type of learning that reflects changing responsiveness to repeated information. In two longitudinal studies, we examined individual differences, stability, and developmental change in the ontogeny of visual habituation in human infants across the middle of the first year of life. To study this phenomenon in breadth, we tested infants from two social classes within the same culture and infants from two different cultures. Infants demonstrated significant, but comparable, individual differences in habituation across socioeconomic and cultural variations in rearing circumstances; they showed significant, if moderate, stability in habituation; and they habituated significantly more quickly with age. These results are interpreted in terms of developing human beings' increasing efficiency in processing visual information near the beginning of extrauterine life. |
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