AI Article Synopsis

  • Infants as young as 1 month can distinguish changes in color and shape combinations of objects, indicating early feature-binding capabilities.
  • At 2 months, infants show a decline in performance as they experience a notable shift in visual attention patterns, moving from fixation on objects to making quick eye movements between them.
  • By 3 months, their ability to integrate features improves again, suggesting that the mechanisms of perception and neural processes differ significantly across these early developmental stages.

Article Abstract

How does the developing brain of the human infant solve the feature-binding problem when visual stimuli consisting of multiple colored objects are presented? A habituation--dishabituation procedure revealed that 1-month-old infants have the ability to discriminate changes in the conjunction of a familiar shape and color in two objects. However, this good earlier performance was followed by poorer performance at 2 months of age. The performance improved again at 3 months of age. Detailed analysis of the oculomotor behaviors revealed that the age of 2 months was a period of drastic transition when the tendency to stay with the fixated objects disappeared and repetitive saccades between the two objects emerged. Our findings suggest that the ability to perceive conjunctions of features is available to infants very early, that the perceptual/neural basis at 1 and at 3 months of age may be fundamentally different, and that feature integration by vigorous eye movements or selective attention may be the key functional difference between the age groups.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1068/p3167DOI Listing

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