Infants' neural processing of facial attractiveness

The relationship between infants’ neural processing of and visual preferences for attractive and unattractive faces was investigated through the integration of event-related potential and preferential looking methods. Six-month-olds viewed color images of female faces previously rated by adults for...

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Main Author: Jankowitsch, Jessica Michelle
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/28508
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-285082015-09-20T17:29:51ZInfants' neural processing of facial attractivenessJankowitsch, Jessica MichelleFace perceptionPhysical attractivenessElectroencephalographyInfant developmentInfancy (2-23 mo)The relationship between infants’ neural processing of and visual preferences for attractive and unattractive faces was investigated through the integration of event-related potential and preferential looking methods. Six-month-olds viewed color images of female faces previously rated by adults for attractiveness. The faces were presented in contrasting pairs of attractiveness (attractive/unattractive) for 1.5-second durations. The results showed that compared to attractive faces, unattractive faces elicited larger N290 amplitudes at left hemisphere electrode sites (PO9) and smaller P400 amplitudes at electrode sites across both hemispheres (PO9 and PO10). There were no significant differences between infants’ overall looking times based on attractiveness, however, a significant relationship was found between amplitude and trial looking time; larger N290 amplitudes were associated with longer trial looking times. The results suggest that compared to attractive faces, unattractive faces require greater cognitive resources and longer initial attention for visual processing.text2015-02-16T22:24:11Z2014-122015-01-16December 20142015-02-16T22:24:11ZThesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/28508en
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Face perception
Physical attractiveness
Electroencephalography
Infant development
Infancy (2-23 mo)
spellingShingle Face perception
Physical attractiveness
Electroencephalography
Infant development
Infancy (2-23 mo)
Jankowitsch, Jessica Michelle
Infants' neural processing of facial attractiveness
description The relationship between infants’ neural processing of and visual preferences for attractive and unattractive faces was investigated through the integration of event-related potential and preferential looking methods. Six-month-olds viewed color images of female faces previously rated by adults for attractiveness. The faces were presented in contrasting pairs of attractiveness (attractive/unattractive) for 1.5-second durations. The results showed that compared to attractive faces, unattractive faces elicited larger N290 amplitudes at left hemisphere electrode sites (PO9) and smaller P400 amplitudes at electrode sites across both hemispheres (PO9 and PO10). There were no significant differences between infants’ overall looking times based on attractiveness, however, a significant relationship was found between amplitude and trial looking time; larger N290 amplitudes were associated with longer trial looking times. The results suggest that compared to attractive faces, unattractive faces require greater cognitive resources and longer initial attention for visual processing. === text
author Jankowitsch, Jessica Michelle
author_facet Jankowitsch, Jessica Michelle
author_sort Jankowitsch, Jessica Michelle
title Infants' neural processing of facial attractiveness
title_short Infants' neural processing of facial attractiveness
title_full Infants' neural processing of facial attractiveness
title_fullStr Infants' neural processing of facial attractiveness
title_full_unstemmed Infants' neural processing of facial attractiveness
title_sort infants' neural processing of facial attractiveness
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/28508
work_keys_str_mv AT jankowitschjessicamichelle infantsneuralprocessingoffacialattractiveness
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