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Basic Cognitive Processes - 2 Psych. 414 Prof. Jessica Sommerville Infant perception • Visual perception • Auditory perception • Intermodal perception Face perception • By 3 months look longer at face than non-face, and show a preference for familiar faces • After 6 months face perception becomes more adult-like – Orientation, gender, emotional expression, attractiveness • Faces as preferred stimuli from birth? – Preferential tracking of faces from birth – Innate template for detecting faces based on configurational elements Auditory perception • Head-turn paradigm • HAS paradigm Head-turn paradigm •Hear noise •Reinforced for turning head in particular direction High-amplitude sucking (HAS) paradigm • Baseline sucking • Reinforced for increases in sucking rate • Sucking wanes with repeated presentation (habituation) • Different sound: increased sucking? Speech perception • Preferences: – Speech over non-speech; infant-directed speech – Preference for mother’s voice: due to familiarity • From birth: Cat in the Hat study (DeCasper & Spence, 1986; txt p. 49-50) Speech perception • Discriminations: – Categorical speech perception: differences between speech sounds are continuous -- we perceive them as categorical • Present in adults and infants • Initially discriminate speech sounds across all languages • Decline in non-native contrasts between 6 and 12 months of age • Matter of degree not overall loss • Categorical perception not unique to humans or speech Intermodal perception • Recognition of common source of sensation; ability to match information across senses • Sights and sounds – By 3 months match voice to face based on sex, age, and mouth movements • Sights and feels – Match visual impression to touch by 1 month – Imitation (at birth) Memory development: The traditional view Recognition Recall Applying schemas to objects Habituation/dishabituation Requires mental representation Deferred imitation Operant conditioning TIME 18 months Recognition • Familiarity with a reencountered stimulus • Habituation paradigms – Infants habituate to a repeated stimulus and dishabituate to a novel stimulus from birth – 5 month-olds show a novelty preference for new faces and new objects after two weeks (Fagen, 1973; Fantz et al., 1975) – 6 month olds remember dynamic stimulus from 3 months ago (Bahrick & Pickens, 1995) Recognition • Operant conditioning paradigms (Rovee-Collier and colleagues) – Mobile task: 3 minute baseline (no reinforcement); 9-minute reinforcement period; expose babies to mobile later – 3 month-old infants remember for 2 weeks – Initially, memories are highly specific Recall • The ability to retrieve a representation from memory in the absence of cues • Measured via deferred imitation - Infant watches action (no immediate imitation is allowed) - Given opportunity to reproduce action at a later point in time • Piaget – Not until 18 months of age – Relies on mental representation Recall • But emerging evidence suggests that it develops earlier – First evident in 6-month-olds – By 9 months infants can reproduce an action they say 24 hours earlier (a subset up to 1 month) – 23 month-olds imitate actions they saw modeled 1 full year ago Memory development and the brain • Age-related changes between 6 months and 2 years in deferred imitation linked to brain development • Hippocampus – Develops early – Underlies deferred imitation of simple actions at 6 months • Long-term recall of more complex actions requires additional brain areas – Prefrontal lobe, temporal lobe