On the typical and atypical development of face processing and recognition during the first three months of life and in a population of school-aged children born prematurely

Face stimuli challenge the infant's immature visual processing system's capacity to differentiate stimuli that differ in subtle ways. Experiments I to 4 investigated infants' preference for the human face between birth and 3 months of age when contrasted with four control stimuli. A v...

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Main Author: Rotsaert, Marianne Helene Elise
Published: University of Sheffield 2006
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Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.427222
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-4272222015-03-19T03:58:34ZOn the typical and atypical development of face processing and recognition during the first three months of life and in a population of school-aged children born prematurelyRotsaert, Marianne Helene Elise2006Face stimuli challenge the infant's immature visual processing system's capacity to differentiate stimuli that differ in subtle ways. Experiments I to 4 investigated infants' preference for the human face between birth and 3 months of age when contrasted with four control stimuli. A visual preference technique was used because it does not call upon the participant's ability to speak. A spontaneous preference for a photographic representation of the human face was observed at birth for three out of four conditions. At 3 months of age, a preference for the human face was observed in two conditions. However, at I month of age, no preferences were observed. Findings did not support the view that the selectivity of the infant's responses to faces increases with exposure to faces and narrowing of the perceptual window (Nelson, 2001). Experiment 5 examined infants' ability to discriminate specific exemplars of the human face category, namely the mother's face, between I and 9 months of age. A preference for the mother's face was observed at I month. A tendency to prefer the stranger's face was observed at 3 months. No preference was observed at 6 and 9 months, thus suggesting that the visual preference procedure is not suitable for measuring recognition at these ages. Premature birth is associated with brain injury, which can lead to visual and intellectual deficits. Experiment 6 investigated general intelligence as well as face processing in school-aged children born prematurely and at term. Results indicated that premature children displayed levels within the normal range of intelligence. Furthermore, no long-term visual deficits were observed as performance levels for the discrimination of facial emotions were comparable between groups. Only premature children displayed an inversion effect, thereby demonstrating an adult-like face processing system.155.413University of Sheffieldhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.427222http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/3585/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
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topic 155.413
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Rotsaert, Marianne Helene Elise
On the typical and atypical development of face processing and recognition during the first three months of life and in a population of school-aged children born prematurely
description Face stimuli challenge the infant's immature visual processing system's capacity to differentiate stimuli that differ in subtle ways. Experiments I to 4 investigated infants' preference for the human face between birth and 3 months of age when contrasted with four control stimuli. A visual preference technique was used because it does not call upon the participant's ability to speak. A spontaneous preference for a photographic representation of the human face was observed at birth for three out of four conditions. At 3 months of age, a preference for the human face was observed in two conditions. However, at I month of age, no preferences were observed. Findings did not support the view that the selectivity of the infant's responses to faces increases with exposure to faces and narrowing of the perceptual window (Nelson, 2001). Experiment 5 examined infants' ability to discriminate specific exemplars of the human face category, namely the mother's face, between I and 9 months of age. A preference for the mother's face was observed at I month. A tendency to prefer the stranger's face was observed at 3 months. No preference was observed at 6 and 9 months, thus suggesting that the visual preference procedure is not suitable for measuring recognition at these ages. Premature birth is associated with brain injury, which can lead to visual and intellectual deficits. Experiment 6 investigated general intelligence as well as face processing in school-aged children born prematurely and at term. Results indicated that premature children displayed levels within the normal range of intelligence. Furthermore, no long-term visual deficits were observed as performance levels for the discrimination of facial emotions were comparable between groups. Only premature children displayed an inversion effect, thereby demonstrating an adult-like face processing system.
author Rotsaert, Marianne Helene Elise
author_facet Rotsaert, Marianne Helene Elise
author_sort Rotsaert, Marianne Helene Elise
title On the typical and atypical development of face processing and recognition during the first three months of life and in a population of school-aged children born prematurely
title_short On the typical and atypical development of face processing and recognition during the first three months of life and in a population of school-aged children born prematurely
title_full On the typical and atypical development of face processing and recognition during the first three months of life and in a population of school-aged children born prematurely
title_fullStr On the typical and atypical development of face processing and recognition during the first three months of life and in a population of school-aged children born prematurely
title_full_unstemmed On the typical and atypical development of face processing and recognition during the first three months of life and in a population of school-aged children born prematurely
title_sort on the typical and atypical development of face processing and recognition during the first three months of life and in a population of school-aged children born prematurely
publisher University of Sheffield
publishDate 2006
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.427222
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