4.6 Article

Gaze Following Is Accelerated in Healthy Preterm Infants

Journal

PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE
Volume 25, Issue 10, Pages 1884-1892

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0956797614544307

Keywords

gaze following; facial expression; emotion; premature; experience; social ability

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Gaze following is an essential human communication cue that orients the attention of two interacting people to the same external object. This capability is robustly observed after 7 months of age in full-term infants. Do healthy preterm infants benefit from their early exposure to face-to-face interactions with other humans to acquire this capacity sooner than full-term infants of the same chronological age, despite their immature brains? In two different experiments, we demonstrated that 7-month-old preterm infants performed like 7-month-old full-term infants (with whom they shared the same chronological age) and not like 4-month-old full-term infants (with whom they shared the same postmenstrual age). The duration of exposure to visual experience thus appears to have a greater impact on the development of early gaze following than does postmenstrual age.

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