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Infants' perception of natural and distorted...
Journal article

Infants' perception of natural and distorted arrangements of a schematic face.

Abstract

The techniques of visual preference and of habituation were used to test the ability of 1- and 2-month-olds to discriminate various arrangements of the features of the human face. We showed infants schematic drawings of a human face with the features (1) arranged naturally, (2) arranged symmetrically but scrambled, and (3) arranged asymmetrically and scrambled. 2-month-olds discriminated among all 3 arrangements; 1-month-olds appeared not to discriminate between any of them 2-month-olds also showed a preference for a natural arrangement of the features, but 1-month-olds did not. Thus, by 2 months infants may recognize how the features of a natural human face are arranged and generalize that knowledge to schematic faces.

Authors

Maurer D; Barrera M

Journal

Child Development, Vol. 52, No. 1, pp. 196–202

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Publication Date

March 1, 1981

DOI

10.2307/1129230

ISSN

0009-3920
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