4.2 Article

The development of grasping comprehension in infancy: covert shifts of attention caused by referential actions

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume 208, Issue 2, Pages 297-307

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00221-010-2479-9

Keywords

Infancy; Goal-directed actions; Action perception; Grasping action; Saccadic reaction times; Eye tracking

Categories

Funding

  1. Swedish Research Council [421-2006-1794]
  2. Marie-Curie ITN RobotDoc

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An eye tracking paradigm was used to investigate how infants' attention is modulated by observed goal-directed manual grasping actions. In Experiment 1, we presented 3-, 5-, and 7-month-old infants with a static picture of a grasping hand, followed by a target appearing at a location either congruent or incongruent with the grasping direction of the hand. The latency of infants gaze shift from the hand to the target was recorded and compared between congruent and incongruent trials. Results demonstrate a congruency effect from 5 months of age. A second experiment illustrated that the congruency effect of Experiment 1 does not extend to a visually similar mechanical claw (instead of the grasping hand). Together these two experiments describe the onset of covert attention shifts in response to manual actions and relate these findings to the onset of manual grasping.

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