Infants' perception of concavity and convexity of shaded objects

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Abstract

The discriminative sensitivities of 30 4-month-old and 30 8-month-old infants for concave and convex objects were measured using the preferential-looking method. Five cylinder-like objects with different magnitudes of concave or convex shaded surfaces and outline contours were presented to the infants in pairs. The results indicated that the 4-month-old infants could discriminate better between object convexities than between object concavities. In contrast, the 8-month-old infants were able to equally discriminate between object concavities and object convexities, and their sensitivity to both object concavity/convexity was much higher than that of the 4-month-old infants. This difference in the sensitivity to object concavity and convexity suggested that younger and older infants might have differential abilities for cue utilization for recovering object structures. © Japanese Psychological Association 2011.

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APA

Kawabata, H., & Gyoba, J. (2011). Infants’ perception of concavity and convexity of shaded objects. Japanese Psychological Research, 53(3), 312–318. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-5884.2011.00471.x

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