The next talk in the CDC Seminar series will be given by
Stefanie Hoehl, University of Heidelberg
Date: March 2, 2011, 5 PM
Location: Cognitive Development Center, Hattyú u. 14, 3rd floor
Effects of social and non-social cues on infants' attention towards
objects<http://www.ceu.hu/events/2011-03-02/effects-of-social-and-non-social-cues-on-infants-attention-towards-objects>
Infants are sensitive to social cues such as eye gaze and emotional
expressions from early on. In a series of studies we have examined the
effects of emotional expressions and eye gaze cues on infants' attention
towards objects using ERP. At three months of age infants show an increased
Nc response for objects, which were previously presented with a fearful vs.
neutral face looking towards the objects. This Nc effect was interpreted as
reflecting increased attention to the fearfully cued objects. While we found
no such effect for happy vs. neutral faces, a very similar effect was found
for surprised vs. neutral faces. In a further series of studies we are
comparing the effects of different social attention cues with non-social
movement cues using ERP and eye tracking. Our results show that a turning
head affects 4-month-olds subsequent neural responses and visual preferences
for novel objects, while a turning car has no significant effect on infants'
attention or visual preferences. Our findings suggest that even very young
infants selectively use social cues to guide their attentional resources.
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