Publication | Closed Access
Four-Month-Old Infants' Sensitivity to Binocular and Kinetic Information for Three-Dimensional-Object Shape
62
Citations
18
References
1987
Year
Developmental Cognitive NeuroscienceKinetic InformationInfant PerceptionMotor ControlCognitionDisparity-sensitive InfantsFour-month-old InfantsSocial SciencesEarly VisionCognitive DevelopmentMultisensory IntegrationPerception SystemDisparity Sensitivity TestCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesOphthalmologyVision ResearchExperimental PsychologyComputer VisionVisual FunctionEye TrackingPediatricsSpatial CognitionMedicineStereoscopic ProcessingThree-dimensional-object Shape
4-month-old infants were tested for sensitivity to kinetic and binocular information for 3-dimensional-object shape. The study included 2 tests: a test for sensitivity to binocular disparity and a shape perception test. The disparity sensitivity test used a preferential looking procedure developed by Held, Birch, and Gwiazda. On the basis of the results of this test, infants were assigned to disparity-sensitive and disparity-insensitive groups. In the shape perception test, a "transfer-across-depth-cues" method was employed. Infants were habituated to a rotating object whose shape was specified by kinetic information and were then presented with stationary stereograms specifying the same object and a novel-shaped object. The disparity-sensitive infants looked significantly longer at the novel object than at the familiar object, whereas the disparity-insensitive infants showed no difference in looking time to the novel and the familiar objects. The results indicate that disparity-sensitive 4-month-old infants can perceive 3-dimensional-object shape from kinetic and binocular depth information.
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