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Tracking infant attention to talking faces

Posted on:2013-11-19Degree:M.AType:Thesis
University:Florida Atlantic UniversityCandidate:Tift, Amy HFull Text:PDF
GTID:2455390008967477Subject:Developmental Psychology
Abstract/Summary:
Speech perception plays an important role in how infants begin to produce speech. This study aims to understand how changes in infant selective attention to various parts of talking faces guides their understanding of speech and subsequent production. In this study, we tracked infant (4-12 months of age) and adult gaze patterns to determine where on a face they attend, when hearing and seeing the face speak in either their native (English) or a non-native language (Spanish). We also tracked infant selective attention to moving-silent and silent-static faces, to determine if this would results in different patterns of attention. The findings suggest that there are two shifts in infant attention. The first shift occurs between four and eight months of age, with infants shifting their attention from the eyes to the mouth of the talking face. The second shift occurs around twelve months of age, when infants begin to return their gaze back to the eye region when hearing and seeing their native language, but continue to attend to the mouth region when hearing and seeing the non-native language. Overall, the results of this study suggest that changes in selective attention to talking faces guides the development of speech production and is dependent on early language experience.
Keywords/Search Tags:Attention, Infant, Talking, Faces, Speech, Language
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