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Kovack-Lesh, Kristine A.; Oakes, Lisa M.; McMurray, Bob – Infancy, 2012
We examined how infants' categorization is jointly influenced by previous experience and how much they shift their gaze back and forth between stimuli. Extending previous findings reported by K. A. Kovack-Lesh, J. S. Horst, and L. M. Oakes (2008), we found that 4-month-old infants' (N = 122) learning of the exclusive category of "cats" was related…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Classification, Infants, Attention
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Peterson, Mary A. – Infancy, 2011
Bhatt and Quinn (2011) review the substantial evidence that learning constrains perceptual organization in infants. With those findings as a foundation, they discuss five kinds of experiences that engender learning in infants and propose that attention and unitization mediate infant learning. Bhatt and Quinn's article is informative--the ideas…
Descriptors: Infants, Learning, Visual Perception, Learning Experience
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Harel, Hagar; Gordon, Ilanit; Geva, Ronny; Feldman, Ruth – Infancy, 2011
Although research has demonstrated poor visual skills in premature infants, few studies assessed infants' gaze behaviors across several domains of functioning in a single study. Thirty premature and 30 full-term 3-month-old infants were tested in three social and nonsocial tasks of increasing complexity and their gaze behavior was micro-coded. In…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Infants, Premature Infants, Recognition (Psychology)
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Reynolds, Greg D.; Guy, Maggie W.; Zhang, Dantong – Infancy, 2011
Past studies have identified individual differences in infant visual attention based upon peak look duration during initial exposure to a stimulus. Colombo and colleagues found that infants that demonstrate brief visual fixations (i.e., short lookers) during familiarization are more likely to demonstrate evidence of recognition memory during…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Attention, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Infants
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Lickliter, Robert; Bahrick, Lorraine E.; Honeycutt, Hunter – Infancy, 2004
Information presented concurrently and redundantly to 2 or more senses (intersensory redundancy) has been shown to recruit attention and promote perceptual learning of amodal stimulus properties in animal embryos and human infants. This study examined whether the facilitative effect of intersensory redundancy also extends to the domain of memory.…
Descriptors: Stimulation, Attention, Infants, Memory
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Shultz, Thomas R.; Cohen, Leslie B. – Infancy, 2004
We used an encoder version of cascade correlation to simulate Younger and Cohen's (1983, 1986) finding that 10-month-olds recover attention on the basis of correlations among stimulus features, but 4- and 7-month-olds recover attention on the basis of stimulus features. We captured these effects by varying the score threshold parameter in cascade…
Descriptors: Infants, Learning, Age Differences, Attention