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The movement of internal facial features elicits 7 to 8-month-old infants' preference for face patterns

✍ Scribed by Hiroko Ichikawa; So Kanazawa; Masami K. Yamaguchi


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Weight
137 KB
Volume
20
Category
Article
ISSN
1522-7227

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✦ Synopsis


A preference for static face patterns is observed in newborns and disappears around 3 months after birth. A previous study has demonstrated that 5-month-old infants prefer schematic faces only when the internal features are moving, suggesting that facespecific movement enhances infants' preference.

The present study investigates the facilitative effect of the movement of internal facial features on infants' preference. To examine infants' preference, we used animated face patterns consisting of a head-shaped contour and three disk blobs. The inner blobs expanded and contracted to represent the opening and closing of the eyes and mouth, and were constrained to open and close only in a biologically possible vertical direction resembling the facial muscle structure. We compared infants' preferential looking time for this vertically moving (VM) face pattern with their looking time for a horizontally moving (HM) face pattern in which blobs transformed at the same speed in a biologically impossible, horizontal direction.

In Experiment 1, 7 to 8-month-olds preferred the VM to the HM, but 5 to 6-month-olds did not. However, the preference was diminished in both cases when the moving face patterns were presented without contour (Experiment 2). Our results suggest that internal facial features with vertical movements promote face preference in 7 to 8-month-olds.