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Caucasian Infants’ Attentional Orienting to Own- and Other-Race Faces

Jonathan E. Prunty, Kelsey C. Jackson, Jolie R. Keemink, David J. Kelly

2020Brain Sciences15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Infants show preferential attention toward faces and detect faces embedded within complex naturalistic scenes. Newborn infants are insensitive to race, but rapidly develop differential processing of own- and other-race faces. In the present study, we investigated the development of attentional orienting toward own- and other-race faces embedded within naturalistic scenes. Infants aged six-, nine- and twelve-months did not show differences in the speed of orienting to own- and other race faces, but other-race faces held infants' visual attention for longer. We also found a clear developmental progression in attentional capture and holding, with older infants orienting to faces faster and fixating them for longer. Results are interpreted within the context of the two-process model of face processing.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyRace (biology)Developmental psychologyContext (archaeology)Visual attentionCognitive psychologyAudiologyCognitionNeuroscienceMedicineBotanyPaleontologyBiologyFace Recognition and PerceptionVisual Attention and Saliency DetectionEvolutionary Psychology and Human Behavior
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