4.6 Article

Naturalistic Face Learning in Infants and Adults

Journal

PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE
Volume 33, Issue 1, Pages 135-151

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/09567976211030630

Keywords

infancy; visual development; face recognition; eye tracking; within-person variability; facial feature tracking; open data

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The study compares the attentional mechanisms in adults and infants learning naturally varying faces, finding that infants have difficulty resisting contextual distractions during the learning process, leading to a potential lack of discrimination between familiar and novel faces.
Everyday face recognition presents a difficult challenge because faces vary naturally in appearance as a result of changes in lighting, expression, viewing angle, and hairstyle. We know little about how humans develop the ability to learn faces despite natural facial variability. In the current study, we provide the first examination of attentional mechanisms underlying adults' and infants' learning of naturally varying faces. Adults (n = 48) and 6- to 12-month-old infants (n = 48) viewed videos of models reading a storybook; the facial appearance of these models was either high or low in variability. Participants then viewed the learned face paired with a novel face. Infants showed adultlike prioritization of face over nonface regions; both age groups fixated the face region more in the high- than low-variability condition. Overall, however, infants showed less ability to resist contextual distractions during learning, which potentially contributed to their lack of discrimination between the learned and novel faces. Mechanisms underlying face learning across natural variability are discussed.

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