One-month-old infants show visual preference for human-like feature

  • Sanefuji W
  • Wada K
  • Yamamoto T
  • et al.
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Abstract

Infants’ behaviors toward humans differ from those toward objects since early development.  Previous studies have mainly investigated the role of motion for the distinction between human and non-human objects, although physical appearance is another crucial factor.  The present study investigated one-month-old infants’ responses to the still-image of human faces and non-human objects including face-like pattern (doll and object), using this infant-control preferential looking procedure.  The results revealed the infants’ preference for human faces over objects including face-like patterns but no such preferences for humans over dolls.  The infants preferred faces resembling human faces in the absence of motion information.  Such preferences for human-like features supplement evidence on the first step of early social cognition, which is important in human communication.

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Sanefuji, W., Wada, K., Yamamoto, T., Shizawa, M., Matsuzaki, J., Mohri, I., … Taniike, M. (2011). One-month-old infants show visual preference for human-like feature. Letters on Evolutionary Behavioral Science, 2(1), 5–8. https://doi.org/10.5178/lebs.2011.10

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