4.2 Article

Infants perceiving and acting on the eyes: Tests of an evolutionary hypothesis

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL CHILD PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 85, Issue 3, Pages 199-212

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/S0022-0965(03)00022-5

Keywords

eye gaze; mutual gaze; attention; infants; modularity; domain-specific

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It has been hypothesized that an evolutionarily ancient mechanism underlies the ability of human infants to detect and act upon the direction of eye gaze of another human face. However, the evidence from behavioral studies with infants is also consistent with a more domain-general system responsive to the lateral motion of stimuli regardless of whether or not eyes are involved. To address this issue three experiments with 4-month-old infants are reported that utilize a standard face-cueing paradigm. In the first experiment an inverted face was used to investigate whether the motion of the pupils elicits the cueing effect regardless of the surrounding face context. In the second experiment pupil motion and eye gaze direction were opposed, allowing us to assess their relative importance. In a third experiment, a more complex gaze shift sequence allowed us to analyse the importance of beginning with a period of mutual gaze. Overall, the results were consistent with the importance of the perceived direction of motion of pupils. However, to be effective in cueing spatial locations this motion needs to be preceded by a period of direct mutual gaze (eye contact). We suggest that evolution results in information-processing biases that shape and constrain the outcome of individual development to eventually result in adult adaptive specializations. (C) 2003 Elsevier Science (USA). All rights reserved.

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