Late Development of Early Visual Perception: No Topology-Priority in Peripheral Vision Until Age 10

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Abstract

Topological property (TP) is a basic geometric attribute of objects, which is preserved over continuous and one-to-one transformations and considered to be processed in early vision. This study investigated the global TP perception of 773 children aged 6–14, as compared to 179 adults. The results revealed that adults and children aged 10 or over show a TP priority trend in both central and peripheral vision, that is, less time is required to discriminate TP differences than non-TP differences. Children aged 6–8 show a TP priority trend for central stimuli, but not in their peripheral vision. The TP priority effect in peripheral vision does not emerge until age ˜10 years, and the development of central and peripheral vision seems to be different.

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Tang, H., Song, R., Hu, Y., Tian, Y., Lu, Z., Chen, L., & Huang, Y. (2021). Late Development of Early Visual Perception: No Topology-Priority in Peripheral Vision Until Age 10. Child Development, 92(5), 1906–1918. https://doi.org/10.1111/cdev.13629

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